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COLLECTED AND EDITED 



EDWARD FARR, Esq., 

EDITOR OF "SELECT POETUY OF THE REIGN OF ^iUEEX 
ELIZABETH," "GEMS OF SACRED POETRY," ETC. ETC. 




CAMBRIDGE: 

o 
PRIXTED AT THE VSIf'ERSlTY PRESS: 

FOR J. & J. J. DEIGHTON; 

AND 

JOHN \V. PARKER, LONDON. 



M.DCCC.XLVII. 



.F3 



l?^ 



P H E F A C P:. 



This volume of Select Sacred Poetry was sug- 
gested to the Editor in the course ot liis re- 
searches for the "Select Poetry of the Reign of 
Queen Elizabeth," issued by the Parker Society. 
In those researches he met with so many un- 
known poets of the reign of King James — 
unknown, not only to the public at large, but 
to the lovers of poetry — that he conceived he 
should render some service to society by col- 
lecting specimens of the whole, and publishing 
them as a companion volume to those referring 
to the age of Queen Elizabeth. 

In the pages of this volume are enumerated 
the names of Donne, Quarles, Herbert, Drayton, 
Sir John Beaumont, the Fletchers, Jonson, and 
others, with which the ardent reader of Sacred 
Poetry may be acquainted. 13ut who, it may 
be asked, except the antiquarian, has heard of 
the names of King James, the Earl of Cum- 
berland, Sir William Leighton, Sir John Strad- 
ling, Warren, Farley, Prickett, Peyton, Nathaniel 
Baxter, ^Emelia Lanyer, Parkes, Willymat, Au- 



iv PREFACE. 

gustine Taylor, Arthington, Peacham, Bulloker, 
Graile, Gokins, Crane, Zouche, Penuen, Lithgow, 
Small, Fitzgeffrey, and various others, as among 
England's Sacred Poets ? Yet these authors will 
be found to be all worthy of remembrance equally 
with their known and more fortunate contempo- 
raries. 

It has been thought expedient to retain the 
original orthography, so that the extracts are 
literal reprints, except where obvious errors of 
the press have been corrected. Prefixed are brief 
biographical notices of the Writers from whose 
works selections have been made ; but, as in the 
case of the Elizabethan Poets, so little is known 
of many of them, that the Editor is only able 
to mention their names and the titles of their 
books. 

Concerning the merits of the writers in this 
Selection a few words will suffice. Among such 
a number of authors it must be expected that 
the talent displayed therein greatly varies ; but 
the reader will find many pages of genuine poetry, 
and will, throughout the whole volume, discern 
purity of sentiment, devotional feeling, and solid 
thought. Some names there are among them 
not unworthy of being ranked with that prince 
of Sacred Poets-— Milton. 



PREFACE. 



The Selection has been derived from printed 
books and MSS. The material has been dis- 
covered in the public and in private libraries. 
All the ricli stores in the British Museum and 
other public libraries have been examined dili- 
gently by the Editor, his anxious wish being 
to recover the names of the olden writers of 
his native tongue from the utter oblivion with 
which the lapse of ages had covered them 
and to render the Selection complete as possible. 
He must confess, however, that after all his re- 
searches the volume would have been incomplete 
but for the kind aid afforded him by William 
Henry Miller, Esq. That gentlemen pointed out 
to, and furnished the editor with, many rare 
volumes not to be met with in any other library 
than his own ; for which kindness he gladly avails 
himself of this opportunity of making a public 
acknowledgment. 

E. F. 



IVER, 

January SOth, 1847. 



CONTENTS. 



PAUK 

Preface iij 

Biographical Notices xi 

1. King James 1 1 

II. John Donne 8 

III. Anonymous 23 

IV. Simion Grahame 25 

V. W. A 28 

VI. B. N .*" 29 

VII. Giles Fletcher 34 

VIII. Henry Ainsworth 75 

IX. Sir Edwin Sandys 80 

X. Arthur Warren 81 

XI. Henry Farley 8-5 

XII. George Herbert 87 

XIII. Anonymous 89 

XIV. Robert Pricket jqI 

XV. Anonymous IO2 

XVI. Henry Petowe 10.5 

XVII. Anonymous IO9 

XVIII. Karl of Cumberland 112 

XIX. Michael Drayton II4 

XX. John \ icars 12i 

XXI. Francis Quarles 126 

XXII. Sir .Tohn iieaumont I43 

XXIII. Edmund Dee 160 

XXIV. Benjamin Jonson 162 

XXV. Christopher Lever 167 

XXVI. Thomas Dekker I70 

XXVII. Anonymous 174 

XXVIII. Thomas Peyton I77 

XXIX. John Davies 182 



VIU 



CONTENTS. 



PAGE 

Phineas Fletcher 186 

William Hall 199 

Rachel Speght 200 

Simon Wastill 201 

Robert Aylett 202 

Augustine Taylor 203 

Anonymous 204 

W. Parkes 205 

George Wither 207 

Joseph Hall 223 

William Willymat 227 

Anonymous 228 

^Emelia Lanyer 229 

Sir John Stradling 231 

Nathanael Baxter 236 

Nicholas Breton 239 

George Raleigh 242 

RO. VN 243 

Jerom 245 

Sir Henry Wotton 247 

Sir Walter Raleigh 250 

George Chapman 251 

Edward Hake 255 

Richard Corbet 257 

William Alexander, Earl of Stirling 259 

Henry Arthington 262 

Sir William Leighton 265 

Richard Brathwaite 267 

Henry Peacham 272 

Samuel Daniel 274 

Thomas Scot 276 

Thomas Randolph 279 

Edmond Graile 283 

William Drummond 285 

John Bulloker 291 

Francis Beaumont 293 

William Warner 295 



XXX. 
XXXI. 
XXXIl. 
XXXIII. 
XXXIV. 
XXXV. 
XXXVI. 
XXXVII. 
XXXVIII, 
XXXIX. 
XL. 
XLI. 
XLII. 
XLIII. 
XLIV. 
XLV. 
XLVI. 
XLVII. 
XLVIII. 
XLIX. 
L. 
LI. 
Lll. 
LIII. 
LIV. 
LV. 
LVI. 
LVII. 
LVIII. 
LIX. 
LX. 
LXL 
LXII. 
LXIII. 
LXIV. 
LXV. 
LXVI. 



CONTENTS. 



IX 



LXVII. Lord Bacon 3(X) 

LXVIII. John Taylor 302 

LXIX. Henry Anderson 304 

LXX. John Norden 309 

LXXl. Thomas Tvke 311 

LXXn. Elizabeth MeK ill 314 

LXXIII. S. A. Gorges 315 

LXXIV. Roger Tisdale 316 

LXXV. J. W 318 

LXXVI. Joshua Sylvester 319 

LXXVIl. Richard Zouche 320 

LXXVIII. Raphe Crane.. 322 

LXXIX. Thomas Gokins 324 

LXXX. Doctor Brooke 326 

LXXXI. Thomas Heywood 328 

LXXXII. Peter Small 331 

LXXXIII. Sands Penuen 333 

LXXXIV. J. F 335 

LXXXV. William Lithgow 338 

LXXXVI. JohnWeever 340 

LXXXVII. Charles Fitzgeffrey 341 

LXXXVIII.Walter Quin 342 

LXXXIX. Samuel Rowlands 343 

XC. Anonymous 344 

XCI. John Hagthorpe 346 

XCII. Patrick Hanay 350 

XCIII. Richard Milton 351 

XCIV. Anonymous 352 

XCV. John Abbott 353 

XCVI. John Rhodes 354 

XCVII. Anonymous 356 

XCVIII. Thomas Collins 357 

XCIX. Tristram White 358 

C. Henry Raymonde 359 



BRIEF NOTICES 

OF THE WRITERS IN THIS SELECTION. 



I. I 

KING JAMES I. I 

I 

Like his predecessor. King James I. wrote poetry. 
His majesty, indeed, was ambitious of being handed 
down to posterity as a royal poet. Two of his pro- j 
ductions have afforded specimens for this Selection. 
One of these is entitled, " His Maiestie's Poeticall 
Exercises at Vacant Hours." This volume consists of 
a translation of the " Furies," selected from Du Bartas, 
and the '^ Lepanto," an original poem. The " Le- 
panto," from which our extract is given, consists of ■ 
about nine hundred lines, besides two chorusses at the | 
end : the first, Chorus Venetu-y; and the second, Chorus j 
Angelorum. The other volume alluded to is a transla- 
tion of " The Psalms of King David," which was first | 
pubUshed at Oxford in 1681. It does not appear 
certain, however, that his Majesty was the author of 
that Psalter in the whole. In his address to the reader 
in the "Poeticall Exercises," the Royal Author writes: 
"Rough and unpohshed as they are, I offer them 
unto thee : which being well accepted, will move me 
to haste the presenting unto thee of my Apocalyps, 
and also such nomber of the Psalms as I have per- 
fited, and encourage me to the ending of the rest." 
His Majesty, however, was either not sufficiently 
encouraged, or his kingly care prevented him from 
completing his good design. Bishop Williams, in the 
sermon which he preached on the death of the royal 
Author, and which was published with the title of 
" Great Britain's Salomon," says, in allusion to the 



Xll BRIEF NOTICES OF THE 

work under consideration : " This translation he was 
in hand with, when God called him to sing Psalms 
with the angels. He intended to have finished and 
dedicated it to the only saint of his devotion — the 
Church of Great Britain and that of Ireland. This 
work was staid in the one and thirtieth Psalm." A 
MS. in the British Museum in the handwriting of 
King James, comprising versions more or less perfect 
of thirty one Psalms, corroborates the bishop's testi- 
mony ; and the real truth appears to be concerning 
the entire Psalter which bears his jiame, that his 
Majesty wrote some of the Psalms, and that the rest 
were written by William Alexander, of Menstrie, 
earl of Stirling. Brown bears his testimony to this 
fact in his Introduction to the authorised Scotch 
Version. 

II. 

JOHN DONNE. 

This celebrated poet and preacher of the reign of King 
James was the first and the most vigorous of that 
poetical school, which critics have held up to ridicule 
under the character of " metaphysical." His collected 
poems were first published after his death, which 
took place in 1631, under the title of *■' Poems, Letters, 
and Elegies." Ben Jonson predicted that Donne 
would perish as a poet, for want of being understood. 
His great offence appears to be harshness of versifica- 
tion ; but admitting that he is frequently rugged and 
sometimes obscure, this once favourite writer may 
nevertheless be pronounced to be a true and often a 
delightful poet. 

III. 

ANONYMOUS. 

In the Harleian MSS. there is a small volume bound 
in white vellum, entitled "A Handful of Celestiall 
Flowers ; viz. Divers selected Psalms of David in 
verse, differently translated from those used in the 



WRITERS IN THIS SELECTION. Xlll 

Church ; Divers Meditations upon our Saviour's 
Passion; Certain Hymnes or Carrolls for Christmas 
Daie ; A Divine Pastorell Ei>;logue ; Meditations upon 
the 1st and 13th verses of y^ 17 Chap, of Job. Com- 
posed by divers wortiiie and learned gentlemen. 
Manuscrib'd by R. Cr." The Psalms in this MS. 
are verbatim copies of those in another Harl. MS., 
and were written by Francis and Christopher Davison 
and others. Specimens of these may be found in the 
" Select Poetry of the Reign of Queen Elizabeth." 
The " Pastorell Eglogue" was written by T. Randolph, 
and will be found under his name. The " Medita- 
tions, Hymns, and Carrols," are partly anonymous, 
and it does not appear by whom the Meditations on 
the 17th Chapter of Job were written. It is from 
this part of this curious volume that the annexed 
specimens are derived. The " Handful of Celestial 
Flowers" was compiled by Ralph Crane, himself a 
poet, for a new-year s gift to Sir Francis Ashley, Knt.; 
and it subsequently belonged to Lady Henrietta 
Holies, daughter of John, last Duke of Newcastle of 
that name, who married Edward Harley, second Earl 
of Oxford, whence it came into the Harleian Col- 
lection. 

IV. 

SIMION GRAHAME. 

SiMioN Grahame was the son of Archibald Grahame, 
a burgess of Edinburgh. He was born about 1570, 
and was indebted for a liberal education to King 
James VI. of Scotland. After he left school he 
successively became a traveller, soldier, and courtier. 
In the beginning of the next century he returned 
from his travels, and in 1604 dedicated to his early 
patron, then king of England, a small collection of 
poems under the title of " A Passionate Sparke of a 
relenting minde." He also wrote a work entitled 
** Passionado," and another of prose interspersed with 
poetry, denominated " The Anatomic of Hvmors." 
He died in 1614. 



XIV BRIEF NOTICES OF THE 

V. 

W. A. 

These initials are found to some of the " Hymnes 
and Carrols," in the " Handful of Celestial Flowers" 
described above. 

VI. 

B. N. 

In 1614, a small volume 4to was published, with the 
brief title of " I would and would not," and the 
address to the reader is signed B. N., the inverted ini- 
tials, it is supposed, of Nicholas Breton. The poem 
consists of 174 stanzas, and the volume of twenty - 
two leaves only. 

VII. 

GILES FLETCHER. 

This author was born in the city of London, about the 
year 1588. He was the son of Dr. Giles Fletcher, and 
nej)hew of Richard Fletcher, Bishop of London. He 
was educated at Westminster School, and at Trinity 
College, Cambridge. While at Cambridge^ and appa- 
rently before he took his bachelor's degree, Fletcher 
wrote his noble poem entitled " Christ's Victorie ;" 
the first edition of which appeared in 1610. About 
two years after he received ordination, and he subse- 
quently became rector of Alderton in Suffolk, where 
he died about 1623. Mr. Willmott, in his " Lives of 
Sacred Poets," justly remarks that this author " has 
not received the attention due to his genius, either 
from his contemporaries or from posterity.' " Christ's 
Victorie" is, indeed, one of the finest religious poems 
in the English language. It consists of four cantos, 
and in every part his "golden phrases flie," in a 
stream of " choicest rhetorie." 



WRITERS IN THIS SELECTION. XV 



VIII. 

HENRY AINSWORTH. 

This writer was one of the Non-conforming Clergy, 
who in 1604 left this country, and went to reside in 
Amsterdam. While there he wrote and published 
" The Booke of Psalmes : Englished both in prose 
and metre ;" a copy of which is in the possession of 
the Editor. The version is accompanied with musi- 
cal notes, and at the end there is a mass of learned 
annotations, which obtained the warm praise of Dr. 
Doddridge. Mr. Ainsworth died about 1023, leaving 
an " exemplary character for humility, sobriety, dis- 
cretion, and unblameable virtue." 



IX. 

SIR EDWIN SANDYS. 

Sir Edward Sandys wrote " Sacred Hymns : con- 
sisting of Fifte Select Psalms of David and others, 
paraphristically turned into English verse. And by 
Robert Tailour set to be sung in five parts, and also 
to the Viole, and Lute, or Orph-arion. Published 
for the use of such as delight in the exercise of music 
in her original honour. London, 1G16." It is uncer- 
tain whether the paraphrast was Sir Edwin Sandys, 
the second son of the venerable Archbishop of York, 
or another individual bearing both his title and his 
name, who lived at Latimers, in Buckinghamshire. 



X. 

ARTHUR WARREN. 

Arthur Warren wrote "The Poor Mans Passions; 
and Povertie's Patience," which was published in 
1605. The author inscribes this work in a copy of 
verses, "to his kindest favourer Maister Robert 
Quarme ;" probably an ancestor to his namesake the 
deputy- usher of the black rod in the House of Lords. 
The poem possesses considerable merit, though it is 



XVI BRIEF NOTICES OF THE 

occasionally diminished by an affected introduction of 
words, either novel in themselves, or in their forma- 
tion and application. 

XI. 

HENRY FARLEY. 

In 1621, a volume was published entitled, "St. 
Panic's Church, her bill for the parliament ; as it was 
presented to the King's Majestic on Midlent Sunday 
last; and intended for the view of that most high 
and honourable Court, and generally for all such as 
beare good will to the reflourishing estate of the said 
Church. Partly in verse, partly in prose. Penned 
and published for her good by Henry Farley, author 
of her Complaint." This book consists of only 
twenty leaves, and has no printer's or publisher's 
name. The stanzas introduced into this volume 
from the poetical portion of Farley's work, were, as 
he writes, '^ Given to his Majesty when he tooke 
coach at Theobalds, in his highnesse progresse to 
Scotland ; as my faithfull farewell, or faire wish to 
the good fQccess of his sacred Majestic, and of all his 
noble, reverend, and worthy followers, etc." 

XII. 

GEORGE HERBERT. 

" The divine Herbert" published his principal poeti- 
cal work, entitled "The Temple," in the reign of 
King Charles, but in Playford's Music Book there 
are seven Psalms attributed to him which appear to 
have been written in the period to which this volume 
refers. One of these is given under his name. 



XIII. 

ANONYiAIOUS. 

The pages derived from this author are from MSS. 
in the possession of the Editor. The volume, which 



WRITERS IN THIS SELECTION. XVII 

consists of about eighty pages, appears to have been 
written about 1620. It consists of songs and spiritual 
lays, the whole of which have poetical merit, but 
carnal thoughts and heavenly desires occasionally 
strangely agglomerate. 

XIV. 

ROBERT PRICKET. 

In 1606 a book was "imprinted by George Eld," 
and " sold by John Hodgets," with this singular title : 
" Time's Anatomic. Containing the poore man's 
plaint, Briton's trouble and her triumph, the Pope's 
pride, Rome's treasons and her destruction. Affirm- 
ing that Gog and Magog both shall perish, the Church 
of Christ shall flourish, Judea's race shall be restored, 
and the manner how this mightie work shall be ac- 
complished. Made by Robert Pricket, a souldier; 
and dedicated to all the lords of his Majestie's most 
honourable privie councell." In this poem theolo- 
gical and secular concernments mingle in the mind of 
the soldier author with very sensible reflections on 
both. 

XV. 

ANONYMOUS. 

The extracts from this author are derived from Sir 
Egerton Brydges' " Restituta," who printed them 
from a MS. in the possession of the Rev. H. J. 
Todd. This MS. was noticed by Mr. Todd in his 
edition of Milton's Poetical works, Vol. vi. It was 
evidently written in the age of king James, as in 
the epigrammatic portion there is an allusion to the 
" counsayle" of that monarch, which it is pungently 
said, 

"Made wise men mad, and mad men wise." 

XVI. 

HENRY PETOWE. 

Henry Petowe wrote "Elizabetha quasi vivens. 
Eliza's Funerall. A fewe Aprill Drops, showred on 

[jAMES I. POETS.] I, 



XVIU BRIEF NOTICES OF THE 

the Hearse of dead Eliza : or, the Funerall Teares of 
a true-hearted subject." This work was published in 
1603. Petowe also wrote " England's Caesar. His 
Majestie's most royall Coronation, etc.," which ap- 
peared in the same year. No notice of this author has 
been transmitted by any of our poetical biographers ; 
but it seems probable that he was some dependent on 
the court, as in his dedication to '^ Eliza's Funerall," 
he speaks of his private sorrows for the loss of Queen 
Elizabeth, and as he so quickly pays congratulation to 
her regal successor. This work, from which our ex- 
tract is given, w^as dedicated '' To the worthy and 
curteous gentleman, Mr. Richard Hildersham." 

XVII. 

ANONYMOUS. 

In the " Catalogue of the Collection of MSS. formed 
by the late Benjamin Hey wood Bright, Esq.," sold in 
June 1844 by Messrs. S. Leigh Sotheby, and Co., the 
article No. 186 is thus described : " Poems of the time 
of Queen Elizabeth, written iu a beautiful clear hand 
on vellum ; they are of a religious character, and 
appear not to have been printed." This MS. subse- 
quently came into the possession of Mr. Rodd of 
Newport Street, from whom it was purchased by 
George Stokes, Esq., of Tyndale House, Cheltenham. 
Since it came into the possession of Mr. Stokes, the 
volume has been printed and published by the Reli- 
gious Tract Society ; the contents being of such a 
devotional character as forcibly to illustrate the prin- 
ciples of the immediate successors of the English 
Reformers. In the whole there are one hundred and 
six poems in the volume, chiefly sonnets of fourteen 
lines each ; and specimens of them are given in con- 
nection with this article. The Editor of it — Mr. 
Stokes — justly remarks concerning them: "The gene- 
ral tone of doctrine, with the sentiments pervading 
the whole, will, it is trusted, amply satisfy the reader, 
if any part should not fully meet his wishes, either as 



WRITERS IN THIS SELECTION. XIX 

to the matter or the manner in which they are set 
forth. The rhythm is often rugged, as is usual in 
other poetry of that day ; hut it is free from the false 
glitter, affected antithesis, and laborious pedantry, 
which characterize most of the contemporaneous ver- 
sification, while the force, beauty, and simplicity of 
many expressions, give this little work a high place 
among ancient English poety." 

XVIII. 
EARL OF CUMBERLAND. 

In the Bodleian Library is a MS. entitled, " Poetical 
Translations of some Psalms, and the Song of Solo- 
mon, with other Divine Poems. By that noble and 
religious soule, now sainted in heaven, the right hon- 
ourable Henry, Earl of Cumberland, Lord Clifford, 
Vipont, Brumfiet and Vessey, Lord of Westmoreland, 
and of the Honour of Skipton." Henry Clifford, the 
fifth and last Earl of Cumberland, who wrote this 
MS., was born in 1591, and died at York, in Decem- 
ber 1643. The MS. is in quarto, and contains thirty- 
eight leaves ; comprising sixteen Psalms in metre ; 
David's Lamentation over Saul and Jonathan ; The 
Song of Solomon, in eight chapters ; An Historical 
Meditation upon the Birth, Life, Passion, Resurrec- 
tion, and Ascension of Christ ; and Meditations upon 
the Holy Days of our Calendar. 

XIX. 

MICHAEL DRAYTON. 

The works of this poet, who was born 1563, and died 
in 1631, were published, partly in the reign of Queen 
Elizabeth, and partly in that of King James. The 
extracts in this volume are from his poems entitled 
"David," and "Noah." Drayton enjoyed a high de- 
gree of popularity during the greater part of his long 
Hfe, and his name is still regarded with a liigh degree 
of respect. His principal works are the " Poly-Ol- 



XX BRIEF NOTICES OP THE 

bion," " Ideas," "The Barons' Wars," and "England's 
Heroical Epistles," all of which are remarkable for 
historical research, extensive knowledge, and correct- 
ness of versification. 

XX. 

JOHN VICARS. 

John Vicars was an enthusiastic Calvinistic wi'iter, 
who was bom in London m 15U2, and died in 1652. 
His writings for the most part are satirical, and 
written in prose ; but, besides other things, he wrote 
and published "England's Hallelujah for God's gra- 
tious Benediction; with some Psalms of David in 
verse." His Psalms are after the fashion of the age, 
chiefly applied to contemporaneous events. Thus 
Psalm cxxiii. is "Paraphrased by way of thanksgiving 
for the great deliverances from the Papist Powder 
Plot:— 

King David against the Philistines; 

King James against the Antichristians." 

XXI. 

FRANCIS QUARLES. 

Francis Quarles was born in 1592, and died in 1642. 
He was a writer of the age of King James, and in that 
of Charles I. Those poems which he published within 
the period to which this volume refers, were, "A 
Feast for Wormes," " Pentelogia," " The History of 
Queen Ester," "Job Militant," "The Historic of 
Samson," " Sion's Sonets," "Sion's Elegies," and "Fu- 
nerall Elegies," with some few minor poems. Of 
Quarles as a writer, Mr. Willmott remarks : " It has 
been the misfortune of this poet to realize his own 
aphorism, that 'Shame is the chronical disease of 
popularity, and that from fame to infamy is a beaten 
road.' The favourite of Lord Essex, and the some- 
times darling of the * plebeian judgments,' is now 
kno^vn to many only in the ridicule of Pope. But 
Quarles will live in spite of the Dunciad. His manly 



WRITERS IN THIS SELECTION. XXI 



vigour, his uncompromising independence, his disin- 
terested i)atriotism, and his exaUed piety, cannot be 
entirely forgotten. These are flowers wliose blossoms 
no neglect can wither." Perhaps the most popular 
poem of Quarles is his " Emblems," which first ap- 
peared in 1()35, and which appears to have been imi- 
tations of some Eni])lems written in Latin by Herman 
Hugo, a Jesuit. The Em])lems of Quarles were 
addressed to his " beloved friend Edward Bcnlowes,'* 
to whom he says,*' You have put the theorbo [a kind of 
lute^ into my hand, and 1 have played : you gave the 
musician the first encouragement ; the music return- 
eth to you for patronage." From the various works 
of Quarles a rich volume of genuine poetry might be 
compiled, and should such a volume be published, it 
would redeem his name from the contempt into which 
it has so undeservedly fallen. 

XXII. 

SIR JOHN BEAUMONT. 

Sir John Beaumont was born in 1582, and died in 
1623. He was the elder brother of Francis Beaumont, 
the celebrated colleague of Fletcher. His known 
poetical remains are comprised in a small volume of 
miscellaneous poems, of which the longest is on the 
battle of Bosworth Field. His contemporaries speak 
of his having written the " Crown of Thorns," a 
poem in eight books, but this is apparently lost to 
posterity. \Vinstanley, in his "Honour of Parnassus," 
speaks of Sir John Beaumont, as one of " the great 
souls of numbers," and his poems certainly possess 
great merit. The chief recommendation of them is, 
however, that they are all dedicated to the service of 
virtue and piety : no mean praise for a wTiter of the 
times in which he lived. 

XXIII. 

EDMUND DEE. 

Dee's " Verses against Popery" are an odd collection 
of verses, somewhat after the contexture of ballad- 



XXll BRIEF NOTICES OF THE 

verses. They are inscribed "■ to the noble, worthie, 
renowned prince, King James." They are in MS. 
in the Royal collection in the British Museum, and 
were written in the summer of 1G03. The composi- 
tion professes to be, 

An Exortation for all those 

That are blinded with idolatry; 

They hate the light and walk in darknesse, 

Deceiving themselves. 



XXIV. 

BENJAMIN JONSON. 

The principal works of this celebrated author are 
masques, comedies, tragedies, etc., but he wrote a 
few pieces of religious poetry, which are of a very 
high order. Jonson was born m 1574, and died in 
1687. 

XXV. 

CHRISTOPHER LEVER. 

This author, of whom little is known, wrote " Queen 
Elizabeth's Teares : or her resolute bearing the Chris- 
tian Crosse inflicted on her by the persecuting hands of 
Steven Gardner, bishop of Winchester in the bloodie 
time of Queene Marie." This poem, which consists 
of only thirty-one leaves, was published in 1G07, and 
was dedicated " To the right honourable Lord Robei-t 
Erie of Salisburie, etc." The poem is written in 
praise of Queen Elizabeth, as Defender of the true 
Faith against the errors of popery. Subsequently 
Lever issued another poem entitled the " Crucifixe," 
which is chiefly descriptive of our Saviour's sufferings 
and crucifixion. 

XXVI. 

THOMAS DEKKER. 

Thomas Dekker was a dramatic writer of the reign 
of King James. Like most of the poets of his age, 



WRITERS IN THIS SELECTION. XXIU 



however, he sometimes toiiclied on holier themes, and 
the extracts annexed, which are taken from a rare 
poem entitled " Dekker's Dream," and which was 
puhlished in 1620, hears evidence of great poetic 
power. The poem is dedicated '^ to the truly accom- 
plished gentleman, and worthy deserver of all men's 
loves, Endymion Porter." 

XXVII. 

ANONYMOUS. 

In 1611 was published a small work quarto, and con- 
sisting of only twenty-four pages, entitled " The Pas- 
sion of a Discontented Mind." This work, which 
possesses considerable merit, appeared anonymously, 
but it is supposed by some to be the production of 
Nicholas Breton. 

XXVIII. 

THOMAS PEYTON. 

This author, who was a gentleman of Lincoln's Inn, 
wrote " The Glasse of Time," which appeared in 
1620. The poem is divided into two parts ; " The 
Glasse of Time in the first Age," and " The Glasse 
of Time in the Second Age." The work is illustrated 
with wood-cuts, which remind the reader of the 
quaint engravings accompanying Quarles's Emblems. 
The poem is dedicated " To the Right Honourable 
Francis Lord Verulam, Lord Chancellor of England." 
It exhibits deep ac(|uaintance with Scripture history, 
with much learning and piety. 

XXIX. 
JOHN DAVIES. 

Speciimens from this writer have been introduced into 
the " Select Poetry of the Reign of Queen Elizabeth." 
Those of his works from which extracts are given in 
these pages, are entitled " The Holy Roode, etc." 
1600 ; and " Humour's Heaven on Earth ; with the 



XXIV BRIEF NOTICES OF THE 

Civil Warres of Death and Fortune, as also the 
Triumphs of Death : or, the Picture of the Plague, 
according to the life, as it was in Anno Domini, 
1603.'' This work was also published in 1009. " Hu- 
mour's Heaven on Earth" has a two-fold dedication : 
one to Algernon, Lord Percy, and the other to " the 
Ladie Dorothie and Ladie Lucie Percies." 

XXX. 

PHINEAS FLETCHER. 

Phineas Fletcher, the brother of Giles Fletcher, 
was born in 1584, and died in 1650. He was a clergy- 
man of the Church of England ; having the living of 
Hilgay, in Norfolk, which was presented to him by 
Sir Henry Willoughby. The principal poem of this 
author is "The Purple Island," a poem in twelve 
cantos, containing an allegorical description of the 
body and soul of man. As a whole, this poem would 
not suit the taste of the modern reader, but it abounds 
with rich and picturesque passages. Besides this 
poem, Phineas Fletcher wrote '' Piscatory Eclogues," 
and translated a few of the Psalms of David in verse. 

XXXI. 

WILLIAM HALL. 

William Hall WTote " Mortalitie's Meditation ; or, 
a Description of Siime : with a definition and plains 
setting forth of Man's three chiefest and greatest 
enemies ; to wit, the World, the Flesh, and the Divill. 
1624." 

XXXII. 

RACHEL SPEGHT 

Wrote '* Mortalitie's Memorandvm : with a Dreame 
prefixed, imaginarie in manner, real in matter. 4to. 
1621." 



WRITERS IN THIS SELECTION. XXV 



XXXIII. 
SIMON WASTILL. 

Simon Wastill, "sometime of Queen's College in 
Oxford," and, subsequently, "Schoolmaster of the 
Free School in Northampton," was the author of " A 
True Christian's Daily Delight : being the summe of 
every chapter of the Old and New Testament, etc." 
1623. 

XXXIV. 
ROBERT AYLETT. 

In 1622 Dr. Robert Aylett published a volume en- 
titled, " Peace, with her Fovre Gardens ; viz., Five 
Moral Meditations of Concord, Chastitie, Constant 
Courtesie, Gravitie. Also Thrift's Eqvipage ; and 
Svsanna, or the Arrangement of the two Vnjust El- 
ders." In 1623 he published " Joseph, or Pharoah's 
favourite," and posterior to the reign of King James, 
" Divine Speculations in Metrical Numbers," and " A 
Wife, not ready made, but bespoken by Dicus, the 
Batchelor, and made up for him by his fellow-shep- 
eard, Tityrus : in four Pastorall Eglogues." The 
latter poem, however strange the title may appear, is 
nevertheless of a religious nature. 

XXXV. 

AUGUSTINE TAYLOR. 

Augustine Taylor, "Preacher at Hawarden," wrote 
" Diuine Epistles : dedicated to the Right Honble 
or Worthy Guests inuited to ye Nuptialls of the 
Great King's Sonne, etc.," in which volume is in- 
cluded a poem entitled "News from Jerusalem." 
This volume was published in 1623. 

XXXVI. 

ANONYMOUS. 

In 1617 a volume was published with the title of 
" Machivell's Dogge." Tliis is the sum of the title- 



XXVI BRIEF NOTICES OF THE 



page, except that it sets forth that it was " printed by 
Bernard Alsop for Richard Higginbotham," and was 
to be " solde at his shop at the signe of the Cardinal's 
Hatte, near St. Sepulchre's Church.' 

XXXVII. 

W. PARKES. 

W. Parkes wrote "The Curtain-drawer of the 
World : or the Chamberlaine of that great scene of 
iniquit3\ Where Vice in a rich embroidered gown of 
velvet rides a horse-back like a judge ; and Virtue in 
a thrid bare cloak full of patches goes a foote'like a 
drudge. Where he that hath most mony may be most 
meriy, and he that hath none at all wants a friend he 
shall daily have cause to remember to grieue for." 
This rare work, which is pai-tly prose and partly 
poetry, was published in 4to, 1612. 

XXXVIII. 

GEORGE WITHER. 

This celebrated poet was born in 1588, and died in 
1667. His chief works are, " Prince Henry's Obse- 
quies ; or Mournful Elegies upon his Death ;" " A 
Satire, written to the King's most Excellent Ma- 
jesty ;" " Epithalamia : or Nuptial Poems upon the 
most blessed and happy Marriage between the High 
and Mightie Prince Frederic the Fifth, Count Palatine 
of the Rhine, Duke of Bavier, etc., and the most 
virtuous, gracious, and thrice-excellent Princess Eli- 
zabeth, sole daughter to our dread Sovereign James 
etc.;" "The Shepherds Hunting;" "The Moth;" 
" Hymns and Songs of the Church ;" " Fair Virtue, or 
Mistress of Phil'arete ;" " Abuses Stript and Whipt ;" 
" Britain's Remembrancer ;" " Emblems, Ancient and 
Modern ;" and " EpigTams." These works were all 
collected and printed " for John Budge, dwelling in 
St. Paul's Church Yard, at the Sign of the Green 
Dragon, 1 622." A reprint of this collection appeared not 



WRITERS IN THIS SELECTION. XXVll 

many years ago, and a few copies may now occasionally 
be met with. Of this writer, Mr. JMontgomery ob- 
serves : " There are scattered throughout his multi- 
farious and very unequal productions, many passages 
of great beauty and excellence. He was avowedly a 
Christian poet, though he frequently lost his Christian 
meekness in the heat of polemics ; but his zeal carried 
with it every e^ddence of honesty ; and he was a suf- 
ferer, almost to martyrdom, both for his loyalty and 
his orthodoxy, in the troublous times in which he lived. 
That he was a poet can never be questioned by any 
reader, who has taste and sensibility enough to un- 
derstand and enjoy the exquisitely affecting confes- 
sion of his obligations to the Muse. That he was a 
Christian will be as little questioned by those who are 
most extensively acquainted with the character of his 
religious compositions." 

XXXIX. 

JOSEPH HALL. 

Joseph Hall, the learned Bishop of Norwich, was 
bom in 1574, and died in 1647. He is chiefly known 
as an author by his prose works, and " Vergidemia- 
rum ;" but his name is introduced into these pages as 
the author of " The Note of Divine Meditations," in 
which there are some select psalms, which was pub- 
lished in 1607. 

XL. 

WILLIAM WILLYMAT 

Wrote " A Prince's Looking-Glasse : or a Prince's 
Direction, requisite and necessary for a Christian 
Prmce, etc." 1603. 

XLI. 

ANONYMOUS. 

This author wrote "Apollo Christian: or Helicon 
Reformed." This volume was published in 1617, and 
was dedicated to the Duke of Northumberland. 



XXVlll BRIEF NOTICES OF THE 

XLII. 

jEMILIA LANYER. 

In 1611 was published a work entitled " Salve Deus : 
Rex Judseorum : containing. The Passion of Christ ; 
Eue's Apologie in Defence of Women; The Teares of 
the Daughters of Jerusalem ; The Salutation and 
Sorrow of the Virgin Marie. Written by Mistress 
iEmilia Lanyer, wife to Captain Alfonso Lanyer, 
servant to the King's Majestic." 

XLIII. 

SIR JOHN STRADLING. 

Sir John Stradling wrote " Beat! Pacifici : a Divine 
Poem/' which was published in 1623. This work is 
thus dedicated to King James : " To the Sacred Ma- 
jestic of my dread Soveraigne Lord the King: 

These verses present in your royal view. 
Presumed not to presse into this roome: 
Both brought as prisoners to receive from you, 
Or death or life, as likes you best, the doome. 
Thus the Author and his rimes both prostrate lie, 
And as your highnesse says, say they and I." 

At a later date the poetical knight published a volume 
of Divine Poems. 

XLIV. 
NATHANIEL BAXTER. 

In 1606 a work was published, entitled " Sir Philip 
Sydney's Ourania: That is, Endimion's Song and 
Tragedie, containing all Philosophic." This work 
has the initials N. B. on the title-page, whence some 
have supposed that it was written by Nicholas Bre- 
ton, but it is now known to have been written by 
Nathaniel Baxter, who was tutor to Sir Philip 
Sidney. 



WRITERS IN THIS SELECTION. XXIX 
XLV. 

NICHOLAS BRETON. 

Tins author wrote chiefly in the reign of Queen 
Elizabeth. The extracts in this volume are from 
" flonest Counsaile: A merry fitte of a poetical furie; 
good to read, better to follow, 1605 ;" and "Invective: 
the Hate of Treason, 1616." 

XLVI. 

GEORGE RALEIGH. 

George Raleigh wrote " Christe on his Crosse : or 
the Holy Lambe's Funerall," which was first pub- 
lished in 1624. This poem is written m six-line 
stanzas, and inscribed " to the virtuous and worthy 
gentlewoman, Mrs. Anne Monson, daughter to that 
truly noble knight. Sir W^illiam Monson, of Keners- 
ley in Surrey." 

XLVII. 

RO. VN. 

Ro. Vn. — Vaughan or Underwood — "Bachelor of 
Divinitie," wrote a small poem which consists of only 
a few pages. 

XLVIII. 

JEROM. 



This author wrote "Origen's Repentance, after he 
had sacrificed to the idols of the heathen, gathered 
from Suidas, Niceporvs, etc. Divided into Origen's 
fearful fall ; his behaviour in it ; his worthy and 
sound conversion." This work was published in 1619. 

XLIX. 

SIR HENRY WOTTON. 

Sir Henry Wotton, whose name is familiar to the 
readers of the pleasing narrative written by Isaac 



XXX BRIEF NOTICES OF THE 

Walton, was the author of a few minor poems pos- 
sessing sufficient merit to have survived to our times. 
He was born in 1568, and died in 1640. 

L. 

SIR WALTER RALEIGH. 

The poem annexed to this celebrated name is claimed 
for Sir Walter Raleigh by Sir Egerton Brydges, on 
the authority of the signature " Ignoto ;" a signature 
generally used by him. Sir Egerton Brydges re- 
marks : "If we admit this to be Raleigh's, what shall 
we say to the foul charge of Atheism, or even Deism, 
which has been made against him. The second and 
third stanzas are vigorous and sublime." 

LI. 

GEORGE CHAPMAN. 

George Chapman was the author of a great many 
dramatic works, and some miscellaneous poems. Ex- 
tracts are given in these pages from his " Euthymia? 
Raptus ; or the Teares of Peace, 1609, etc." "There 
is a grave and masculine morality," says Sir Egerton 
Brydges, " in most of Chapman's productions, which 
renders them deserving of particular notice : his per- 
sonal character seems to have corresponded with his 
writings. Oldys remarks that the head of Chapman 
was a treasury or chronicle of whatever was memora- 
ble among the poets of his time; and that he preserved 
in his own conduct the true dignity of poetry, which he 
compared to the sun-flower, that disdains to open its 
leaves to a smoking taper. Drayton calls him Reve- 
rend Chapman, and Wood pronounced him to have 
been a ^ person of a most reverent aspect, religious, 
and temperate ;' qualities rarely meeting in a poet." 

LIT. 
EDWARD HAKE. 

This author wrote both in the reign of Queen Eliza- 
beth and in that of King James. In these pages ex- 



WRITERS IN THIS SELECTION. XXXI 

tracts are inserted from his work entitled " Of Golde's 
Kingdome and this our unhclping Age. Described in 
sundry poems, intermixedly placed after certain other 
poems of more speciall respect, etc. 1604." 

LIII. 

RICHARD CORBET. 

Richard Corbet, Bishop of Norwich, was bom in 
1582, and died in 1635. He wrote " Miscellaneous 
Poems," from which "An Elegie on Dr. Ra vis. Bishop 
of London," is here given. 

LIV. 

WILLIAM ALEXANDER, EARL OF 
STIRLING. 

This noble author was born in 1580, and died in 
1640. His principal writings consist of poems en- 
titled " Doomes Day, Aurora, etc.," and some portion 
of the version of Psalmes ascribed to King James. 

LV. 

HENRY ARTHINGTON. 

Henry Arthington wrote " Principall Points of 
Holy Profession, touching these three estates of 
Mankind : 1. Their Creation ; 2. Their Subvertion ; 
3. Their Restoration. Wherein, 1. God's Merciful- 
nesse ; 2. Satan's Maliciousnesse ; 3. And Man's 
Weaknesse, is made manifesto. 4to, 1607." 

LVI. 

SIR WILLIAM LEIGHTON. 

In 1614 a work was published entitled " The Teares, 
or Lamentacions of a SorrowfuU Soule. Composed 
with Musical Ayres and Songs both for Voyces and 
divers Instruments. Set forth by Sir William Leigh- 
ton, Knight, one of his Majestie's Honourable Band 



XXXll BRIEF NOTICES OF THE 

of Gentlemen Pensioners. And all Psalms that con- 
sist of so many feete as the fiftieth Psalm will go to the 
foure parts for consort." This volume was published 
in folio. 

LVII. 

RICHARD BRATHWAITE. 

Richard Brathwaite was the author of numerous 
dramatic works. The extracts in these pages are de- 
rived from " The Golden Fleece. Where unto bee 
annexed two Elegies, entitled Narcissus' Change, and 
-^son's Dotage, 1611 ;'' and "Remains after Death: 
including, by way of Introduction, divers memorable 
Obseruances, occasioned upon Discours of Epitaphs 
and Epyceds, their distinctions and definitions, seconded 
by approved authors, etc. 1618." 

LVIII. 

HENRY PEACHAM. 

Henry Peacham, Master of Arts, published in 1612 
a work entitled " Minerva Britanna, or a Garden 
of Heroical Devises, furnished and adorned with 
Emblemes and Impresas of sundry natures, newly 
devised, moraUzed, and published." Posterior to the 
reign of King James, Peacham wrote " The Valley of 
Varietie : or Discourse fitting for the Times, con- 
taining very learned and rare passages out of anti- 
quitie, philosophy, and history." 

LIX. 

SAMUEL DANIEL. 

Samuel Daniel was tutor to Lady Anne Clifford, 
subsequently Countess of Pembroke, to whom several 
of his works are dedicated. Extracts from his Muso- 
philus are inserted in the " Select Poetry of the Reign 
of Queen IClizabeth." In these pages an extract is 
given from " Certaine Small Poems lately printed 
with the Tragedie of Philotas," which was published 
in 1605. 



WRITERS IN THIS SELECTION. XXXUl 

LX. 

THOMAS SCOT. 

Thomas Scot wrote " Philomytliie, or Philomytho- 
logie. Wherein Outlandish Birds, Beasts, and Fishes 
are taught to speake true English plainely," which 
was first published in IGIG. A second edition, much 
enlarged, was printed in 1(322, " for Francis Constable, 
at the ^Vhite Lyon, in Paul's Churchyard." 

LXI. 

THOMAS RANDOLPH. 

This poet is memorable as the adopted son of Ben 
Jonson. His principal works, like those of his great 
patron, are dramatic, but he wrote miscellaneous 
poems, many of which are of a Christian character. 
^^^instanley says, " he was sententiously grave," not- 
withstanding the festivity of his principal poems. The 
Eclogue printed in this volume is derived from the 
MS. of " Celestiall Flowers," described in a previous 
article, to which the signature of "T. Randolph, 
gent." is annexed. This Eclogue has been reprinted 
in one or two modern collections of poetry, as in the 
'' Poetry of the Seventeenth Century," edited by the 
Rev. R. Cattermole; but there is considerable variation 
in the textual reading of this MS. and the modern 
reprints. The genius and acquirements of Randolph, 
at an early age, held forth promises of great literary 
eminence, but they were frustrated by a premature 
death, 

LXII. 

EDMOND GRAILE, 

Edmond Graile wrote "Little Timothee; his lesson: 
or a Summarie Relation of the historicall part of 
Holy Scripture, plainely and familiarly comprized in 
meeter for the helpe of memory, and instruction of 
the ignorant." From the title-page of this rare 
volume we learn that Graile was " Master in Arts, 

[jAMES I. I'OETS.] C 



XXXIV BRIEF NOTICES OF THE 

and Physitian of the Hospitall of St. Bartholomew, of 
tlie foundation of Queen Elizabeth in the citie of 
Glocester." 

LXIII. 

WILLIAM DRUMMOND. 

Drummond of Hawthornden united in an eminent 
degree the character* of poet and historian. He 
wrote the history of Scotland during the reigns of the 
five first Jameses, and also poems, consisting of Son- 
nets, Epigrams, Epitaphs, and some large pieces, of 
which many are on moral and sacred subjects. His 
sonnets rank among the most perfect specimens of 
this kind of composition ; and in all his sacred poetry 
there is a genuine poetical feeUng, and a natural 
sweetness and simplicity exhibited, Avhich chann the 
reader. Ben Jon son, the contemporary of Drum- 
mond, said that his verses '^ smelled of the schooles," 
but they were generally the schools of Nature. 
Drummond's poems first appeared in 1616; but the 
most perfect edition of his "Flowers of Sion" was 
published in 1623. 

LXIV. 

JOHN BULLOKER. 

John Bulloker vo'ote " A True Description of the 
Passion of Our Saviour Jesus Christ : as it was called 
by the bloodie J ewes; and registered by the Evan- 
gelists." This was published in "English meetre. 
Calend. November 1618." It was printed by George 
Purslowe, for Samuel Pend ; and was " to be sold at 
his shop neere Holburne Bridge," 

LXV. 
FRANCIS BEAUMONT. 

This author, the celebrated associate in literature 
with Fletcher, was born in 1585, and died in 1615. 
His miscellaneous poems, published after his death. 



WRITERS INT THIS SELECTION. XXXV 

contain ]>ut little suitable to the present collection : 
yet there are a few pieces which entitle his name to a 
place among sacred poets ; and the Editor has selected 
the " Funeral Elogie on tlie Death of the Lady Pene- 
lope Clifton," as the least known of all his sacred 
pieces. The volume from which it is derived is en- 
titled " The Hermaphrodite, The Remedy of Love, 
Elegies, Soimets, with other Poems." 

LXVL 
WILLIAM \yARNER. 

In L592 this author published "Albion's England: 
a Continued Historic of the same Kingdome, from the 
Originals of the first Inhabitants thereof ; and most 
the chiefe alterations and accidents there hapning 
vnto, and in the happie raigne of our now most gra- 
cious Soueraigne, Queen Elizabeth. With varieties 
of inuentiue and historicall mixtures.'' Extracts from 
this work are printed in the " Select Poetry of the 
Reign of Queen EUzabeth." In 1612 Warner pub- 
lished a continuation of this work under the title : 
" Albion's England. A Continued History of the 
same Kingdom, from the Originals of the first Inha- 
bitants thereof: with the mbst chiefe Alterations and 
Accidents there hapning, unto, and in the happie 
Raigne of our now most Soveraigne Lord King James. 
Not barren in Varietie of Inuentive and Historicall 
Intermixtures. First penned and published by Wil - 
liam Warner ; and now revised and newly enlarged a 
little before his death. Whereunto is also newly 
added an Epitome of the Whole Historie of England." 
It is from the Continuation that our extract is given 
in these pages. 

Lxvn. 

LORD BACON. 

It is not generally known that the great Lord Bacon 
paraphrased several of the Psalms. Yet his para- 
phrases possess considerable merit. " The ' fine gold' 
of David is so thoroughly melted down with the 
* refined silver' of Bacon, that the mixture shows no- 



XXXVl BRIEF NOTICES OF THE 



thing of ' alloy,' but a metal, greater indeed in bulk, 
and differing in show from either of its component 
elements, yet exhibiting at the same time a lustre 
wholly derived from the most precious of them." 
There is not in the whole range of English poetry 
two finer or statelier stanzas than the first two of 
the psalm penned by Lord Bacon, inserted in these 
pages. 

LXVIII. 

JOHN TAYLOR. 

John Taylor, who was originally a waterman of 
London, and from thence is called the " water-poet," 
was the author of a great number of poems pub- 
lished within the period from 1612 to 1624. In 1630 
they were all published in one volume, with this title, 
" All the Works of John Taylor, the Water-Poet ; 
being sixty-three in number ; collected into one 
volume by the Author, with sundry new additions, 
corrected, revised, and newly imprinted." The writ- 
ings of Taylor are chiefly secular, but, like most 
other secular poets of his day, he sometimes tuned his 
harp to nobler strains. 

LXIX. 
HENRY ANDERSON 
Wrote " The Court Convert ; or a sincere Son-ow for 
Sin, faithfully traversed, expressing the dignity of a 
true Penitent. Drawn in little by one whose mani- 
fold misfortunes abroad have rendered him necessitated 
to seek for shelter here, by dedicating himself and this 
said small poem." There is no date or printer's name 
to this suiall work, but it is probable that it may be 
of the age of King James, and therefore it is here 
introduced. 

LXX, 
JOHN NORDEN. 

Extracts from this author are included in the " Se- 
lect Poetry of the Reign of Queen Elizabeth." His 
name appears in these pages as the author of " The 



WRITERS IN THIS SELECTION. XXXVU 



Labj'rinth of Man's Life : or Vertue's Delight and 
I Enuie's opposite ;" which was published in 1614. 

LXXI. 
I THOMAS TVKE. 

Thomas Tuke wrote " The Holy Eucharist, and the 
I Popish Breaden God/' which was published in 4to, 
1625. 

LXXII. 

ELIZABETH MELVILL. 

Elizabeth Melvill wrote "A Godly Dream," which 
was published in 1(506. An edition of this work was 
"imprinted at Aberdeen" in 1644, " by E. Raban, 
Laird of Letters," and was " to be sold at his shop 
at the end of the Broad Gate." 

LXXIII. 

S. A. GORGES. 

The lines annexed to this name are derived from the 
Royal MSS. in the British Museum, and they were 
addressed to King James. 

LXXIV. 

ROGER TISDALE. 

In 1622 a work was published having for its title, 
^' The Lawyer's Philosophy : or Law brought to 
Light. Polarized in a Divine Rhapsodic, or Contem- 
plative Philosophic. By Roger Tisdale, Gent." 

LXXV. 
J. W. 

J. W. was " sometime a faithfull and loving servant, 
and unworthy gent, usher to the most Reverend 
Father m God, Doctor John Whitgift," archbishop of 
Canterbury; to whom he consecrated the epitaph 



XXXVlll BRIEF NOTICES OF THE 

inserted in these pages as a " testimonial of his an- 
cient duty." It is preserved in Dr. Ducarels 
" Account of the Town Church, and Archiepiscopal 
Palace of Croydon. 

LXXVI. 

JOSHUA SYLVESTER. 

Joshua Sylvester was the translator of " The Divine 
Works of Du Bartas," the folio edition of which first 
appeared in 1621. He was also the author of some 
poetical pieces, among which is " Lachrimfc Lachri- 
maron: or the Distillation of Teares shede for the 
vntimely Death of the incomparahle Prince Panare- 
tus," which was pubHshed about 1014. Sylvester's 
religious poetiy was held in high esteem by Bishop 
Hall. In alluding in his Epistles to his own metrical 
versions from the Psalms, he observes, " Mr. J. Syl- 
vester hath shewed me how happily he hath some- 
times turned from his Bartas to the sweet singer of 
Israel." Wood also says that Sylvester was an ac- 
complished scholar. Yet the poetical talents of Syl- 
vester were not sufficient to furnish him with suste- 
nance. Under the pressure of poverty he went to 
Middleburgh, where he became " Secretary to the 
Company of Merchants," and there died. 

LXXVII. 

RICHARD ZOUCHE. 

Richard Zouche wrote " The Dove : or Passages of 
Cosmography," which was published in 1(313. From 
the title-page of this work we learn that its author 
was a " Civillian of New Colledge in Oxford." " The 
Dove" was reprinted at Oxford in 1839. 

LXXVIII. 

RAPHE CRANE. 

Raphe Crane wrote " The Workes of Mercy, both 
Corporall and Spirituall," which was published in 1G21. 



WRITERS IN THIS SELECTION. XXXIX 



LXXIX. 

THOMAS GOKINS 

WuoTE " Meditations on the Lord s Prayer, the Key 
of Ileaiienly and Earthly Paradise," which is a diffuse 
Paraphrase of the text, and which was pubHshed in 
1()24. This work was "printed for AVilUani Sheifard, 
and are to be sold at his shop on the entering in of 
Popes-head Alley out of Lombard Street." 

LXXX. 

DOCTOR BROOKE. 

Dr. Samuel Brooke was the intimate friend of 
Dr. Donne. He has not generally been recognised as 
an English poet, though some of his contemporaries 
have left allusions which would lead to the belief that 
more copious remains than the short i)oem introduced 
into this volume at one time were in existence. The 
piece is preserved in an old MS. collection belonging 
to Mr. J. P. Collier. 

LXXXL 

THOMAS HEYWOOD. 

In 1609 this author published "Troica Britanica: or 
Great Britain's Troy ; a Poem divided into seventeen 
severall cantons, intermixed with many pleasant 
poeticall Tales, concluding with an Universall Chro- 
nicle from the Creation untill these present Times." 
In 1635 he also published " The Hierarchic of the 
Blessed Angels," in both of which works there are 
many passages sublime in style and sentiment, though 
rude in metre. 

LXXXII. 

PETER SMALL. 

Peter Small, ^^Batchelour in the Lawcs," wrote 
*' Man's May: or a Moneth's Mindc, wherein the 
Liberty of Man's Minde is compared to the Moneth of 
May," which was published in 1615. 



Xlii BRIEF NOTICES OF THE 

xc. 

ANONYMOUS. 

This author wrote a Broadside ballad entitled "An 
excellent Song, wherein you shall find great consola- 
tion for a troubled minde. To the tune of Fortune 
my Foe." There is no date affixed to it ; but it ap- 
pears to belong to the age to which this volume refers. 
It is derived from the Roxburghe Ballads, now in the 
British Museum, Vol. i. Art. 106. 

XCI. 

JOHN HAGTHORPE. 

This author wrote " Divine Meditations," which was 
published in 1622, and " Visiones Rerum : the Visions 
of Thuigs, or Foure Poems, dedicated to Charles 1., 
when Prince of Wales," which was published in 1623. 
This latter work is part prose and part poetry. Both 
of them are very rare. In 1817, Sir Egerton Brydges 
issued from the Lee Priory Press selections from them, 
under the title of " Hagthorpe Revived ; or Select 
Specimens of a Forgotten Poet." 

XCII. 
PATRICK HANAY. 

Patrick Hanay wrote " The Nightingale — Sheretine 
and Mariana — A Happy Husband — Elegies on the 
Death of Queen Anne — Songs and Sonnets." This 
work was printed " for Nathaniel Butler," and pub- 
lished in 1622. 

XCIII. 

RICHARD MILTON. 

Richard Milton was the author of a work published 
in 1625, entitled '' London's Miserie, The Countreyes 
Crueltie, with God's Mercie. Explained by remark- 
able obseniations of each of them during this last 
visitation," — that is, the great plague of London. 



WRITERS IN THIS SELECTION. xliil 



XCIV. 

ANONYMOUS. 

In 161o a work was published anonymously, entitled 
"Catascopos, or, A Surveigh and Critiqve Censvre 
of the Christian Worid." The poem consists of about 
fifty stanzas. 

xcv. 

JOHN ABBOTT. 

John Abbott wrote " Jesus Prsefigvred ; or a Poeme 
of the Holy Name of Jesvs, in five bookes," which 
was published in 1623. 

XCVI. 

JOHN RHODES. 

John Rhodes, " Minister/' wrote " A Briefe Summe 
of the Treason mtended against the King and State, 
etc. ; and Certaine Songs in Prayse of the King's 
Maiestie, with Prayers for him, etc.," which was pub- 
lished in 1606. 

XCVII. 

ANONYMOUS. 

Wrote " England's Welcome to James, by the Grace 
of God, King of England, Scotland, France, of Ire- 
land, Defender of the Faith, etc.," which was pub- 
lished in 1603. The poem is divided into three cantos, 
the third of which is entirely of a sacred character. 

XCVIII. 
THOMAS COLLINS. 

■ Thomas Collins wrote " The Penitent Pvblican ; his 
Confession of Movth, Contrition of Heart, Vnfaigned 
Repentance, and feruent Prayer vnto God for Mercie 



xliv BRIEF NOTICES OP THE WRITERS, ETC. 



and Forgiueness." This rare work was published in 
1(510, and was dedicated " To the Right Honovrable, 
grave, vertvous, and religious lady, the Lady Kath- 
erine Hastings, Countesse of Huntington." 

XCTX, 

TRISTRAM WHITE. 

This author wrote " The Martyrdome of Saint George 
of Cappadocia, Titular Patron of England, and of the 
most noble Order of the Garter, etc.," which was 
" printed for William Barley, dwelling in Bishopsgate- 
street," in 1614 ; and dedicated to " his worshipful! 
good friend, Mr. George Shilliton, Justice of Peace, 
the King's Receiuer for Yorkeshire, and one of the 
Chiefe Clarkes of his Maiestie's High Court of Star 
Chamber." 

C. 
HENRY RAYMONDE. 

In 1607 a work was published, entitled " The Maiden 
Queene: the Britaine Shephearde's Teares for the 
Death of Astrabonica : Augmented the AYorlde's Va- 
nitie. Both in sententiall verse, necessary and profit- 
able to bee read of all men.'' This work was written 
by Henry Raymonde, who dedicated it " To the right 
worshipfull and vertuous Ladie Katherine, wife vnto 
the worthy Sir George Morton, Knight." 



I. 

KING JAMES. 



SONETT 

From "Poetical Exercises." 

The azur'd vaulte, tlie crystall circles bright, 
Tlie gleaming fyrie torches powdred there, 
The changing round, the shynie beamie light, 
The sad and bearded fyres, the monsters faire ; 
The prodiges appearing in the aire, 
The rearding thunders, and the blustering windes. 
The fowles in hew, in shape, in nature raire, 
The prettie notes that vving'd musiciens finds ; 
In earth the sau'rie flowres, the mettal'd minds. 
The wholesome hearbes, the hautie pleasant trees. 
The syluer streames, the beasts of sundrie kinds ; 
The bounded waves, and fishes of the seas : 

All these for teaching man the Lord did frame, 
To do his will whose glorie shines in thame. 



STANZAS 

From " Char OS Angelorvm." 

Sing, let vs sing with one accord, 

Hallelviah on hie. 
With euery elder that doth bow, 

Before the Lambe, his knee : 
Sing foure and twentie all with vs. 

While heauen and earth resound, 

f J AMES r. POETS.] 



KING JAMES. 



Replenish'd with Jehoua's praise, 
Whose like cannot be found. 

For he it is that is and was 
And euermore shall be, 

Our only One vnseparate, 
And yet in persons three. 

Praise him for that he creat hath 

The heauen, the earth, and all, 
And euer hath preserued them since 

From their ruine and fall. 
But praise him more, if more can be. 

That so he loues his name. 
As he doth mercie shew to all 

That doe professe the same. 



CHORUS VENETVS. 

Sing praise to God, both young and olde, 

That in this towne reniaine. 
With voice and euery instrument 

Found out by mortall braine. 

Sing praises to our mightie God, 

Praise our deliuerer's name : 
Our louing Lord, who now in need 

Hath kytliM to be the same. 

The faithles snares did compasse vs, 

Their netts were sett about; 
But yet our dearest Father in heauen, 

He hath redeem'd vs out. 

Not only that, but by his power 
Our enemies* feet they slaid. 

Whom he hath trapt, and made to fall 
Into the pit they made. 



CHORUS VENETUS. 

# 



Sing praises tlien, both young and okle, 

That in this town remaine, 
To him that hath releeued our necks 

From Turkish yoak prophaine. 

Let vs wash off our sinnes impure, 

Cast off his garments vile, 
And hant his temple euerie day, 

To praise his name awhile. 

O praise him for the victorie. 

That he hath made vs haue. 
For he it was reueng'd our cause. 

And not our armies braue. 

Praise him with trumpet, piphre, and drumme, 

With lutes and organes fine. 
With viols, gitterne, cistiers als, 

And sweetest voices syne. 

Sing praise, sing praise, both young and olde, 

Sing praises one and all, 
To him who hath redeem'd vs now 

From cruel pagans' thrall. 



PSALM XXIX. 

Ye princes' sonnes, yeild to the Lorde, 
Yeild him all force and gloire, 

And yeild to him the honoure deu 
Unto his name thairfoire. 

Inclyne and bou youre selfis adoune. 

Adore lehoua great, 
Qwho sittis most gloriously upon 

His throne and holy seat. 



1—2 



KING JAMES. 

_• 



The uoice of God on watteris ringis, 
And makis a woimdrouse sound ; 

Strong glorious God doth thunder his uoyce 
On watteris that abound. 

The uoyce of God cum mis semely furth, 
His uoyce cummis furth with micht; 

lehoua's uoyce the cedres breakis, 
Euin Liban cedres uicht; 

And makis thaime as a calfe to skipp, 

Trudge Liban Sirion eik, 
Lyke to the faune of unicornis 

Will leape when he doth speik. 

His uoyce makis uildernessis murne, 
And quenchis flamraes of fyre ; 

Euen the desertis of Kades large 
May not abyde his yre. 

lehoua's uoice makis hyndes to calve, 
And bareis the forrestis grene, 

Bot in his temple all his gloire 
He shouis, and makis be sene. 

lehoua sate in the deluge, 

And sittis a king for aye; 
He also to his people giuis 

The force thay haue alluaye. 

The same lehoua great doth blesse 

His people uell belovid 
With great tran quill itie and peace : 

Pray it be not remouid. 



STANZAS FROM THE LEPANTO. 5 

STANZAS FROM THE LEPANTO. 

I SING a wondrous vvorke of God, 

I sing his mercies great, 
I sing his justice heere vvithall, 

Povvr'd from his holy seat. 

To wit, a cruell martiall warre, 

A bloodie battell bolde, 
Long doubtsome fight, with slaughter huge. 

And wounded manifold : 

Which fought was in Lepantoe's gulfe, 

Betwixt the baptized race 
And circumcised turband Turkes, 

Rencountring in that place. 

onely God, I pray thee thrise, 
Tiirise one in persons three. 

Alike eternall, Hke of might. 
Although distinct yee be : 

1 pray thee. Father, through thy Sonne, 
Thy Word immortall still. 

The great archangell of records, 

And worker of thy will. 
To make thy holie Spreit my muse, 

And eik my pen inflame 
Aboue my skill to write this worke, 

To magnifie thy name. 

Into the turning-still of times 

I erre no time can be, 
Whoe was, and is, and times to come, 

Confounded are all three : 

I meane before great God in heauen ; 

(For sunne and moone deuides 
The times in earth by houres and dayes. 

And seesons still that slides ;) 



KING JAMES. 



Yet man, whom man must understand, 

Must speake into this cace ; 
As man our flesh will not permit 

Wee heauenlie things imbrace. 

Then, as I els began to say, 

One day it did fall out, 
As glorious God in glistering throne. 

With angclls round about. 

Did sit, and Christ at his right hand, 

That craftie Satan came, 
Deceauer, lyar, hating man. 

And God's most sacred name; 

This olde abuser stood into 

The presence of the Lord ; 
Then in this manner Christ accus'de 

The sower of discord. 

I know thou from that city comes, 

Constantinople great. 
Where thou hast by thy malice made 

The faithles Turkes to freat; 

Thou hast inflamde their maddest mindes 

With raging fire of wraith 
Against them all that doe professe 

My name with feruent fayth. 
How long, O Father, shall they thus 

Quite vnder foote be tred 
By faithles foikes, who executes 

What in this snake is bred ? 

Then Satan answerd, Fayth, quoth he. 
Their fayth is too, too small; 

They striue, methinke, on either part 
Who farthest backe can fall. 

Hast thou not giuen them in my hands, 
Euen boath the sides, 1 say, 



STANZAS FROM THE LEPANTO. 



That I, as best doth seeme to me, 
May use them euery way? 

Then Jehovah, whose nod doth make 
The heauens and mountains quake, 

Whose smallest wrath the centres makes 
Of all the earth to shake ; 

Whose worde did make the world of nought, 

And whose approoving syne 
Did stablish all, even as wee see, 

By force of voice deuine ; 
This God began from thundering throte 

Graue wordes of waight to bring: 
All Christians serue my Sonne, though not 

Aright in everie thing. 

No more shall now these Christians be 

With infidels opprest; 
So of my holie hallowed name 

The force is great and blest. 

Desist, O tempter ! Gabriel, come, 

O tliou archangel true, 
Whome I haue oft in message sent 

To realmes and townes anew. 

Go quicklie hence to Venice towne. 

And put into their mindes 
To take reuenge of wrongs the Turks 

Haue done in sundrie kinds. 

No whistling winde with such a speed 
From hilles can hirle ore heugh. 

As he whose thought doth furnish speed — 
His thought was speed aneugh. 



II. 

JOHN DONNE. 



HOLY SONNETS. 

I. 

What if this present were the world's last night ? 
Marke in my heart, O soule, where thou dost dwell, 
The picture of Christ crucified, and tell 
Whether his countenance can thee affright : 
Teares in his eyes quench the amazing light ; 
Blood fills his frownes which from his pierc*d head 

fell; 
And can that tongue adjudge thee unto hell 
Which pray'd forgiuenesse for his foes' fierce 

spight? 
No, no ; but as in my idolatrie, 
I said to all my profane mistresses, 
Beauty, of pitty, foulnesse onely is, 
A signe of rigour; so I say to thee. 
To wicked spirits are horrid shapes assign'd — 
His beauteous forme assumes a piteous minde. 

II. 

O my black soul ! now thou art summoned 
By sicknesse, death's herald and champion. 
Thou art like a pilgrim, which abroad hath done 
Treason, and durst not turne to whence hee is fled ; 
Or like a thiefe, which, till death's doome be read, 
Wisheth himselfe dehuered from prison ; 
But, damn'd and hal'd to execution, 
Wisheth that still he might be imprisoned : 



HOLY SONNETS. 9 



Yet grace, if thou repent, thou canst not lacke ; 
But who shall give thee that grace to heginne ? 
O make thyselfe with holy mourning blacke, 
And red with blushing, as thou art with sinne ; 
Oh wash thee in Christ's blood, which hath this 

might, 
That being red, it dyes red soules to white. 

III. 

At the round earth's imagin'd corners blow 

Your trumpets, angells; and arise, arise 

From death, you numberlesse infinities 

Of soules, and to your scatter'd bodies goe. 

All whom the flood did, and fire shall ouerthrow ; 

All whom warre, death, age, agues, tyrannies, 

Despaire, law, chance, hath slaine ; and you whose 

eyes 
Shall behold God, and never tast death's woe. 
But let them sleepe, Lord, and mee mourne a 

space ; 
For, if above all these my sinnes abound, 
'Tis late to aske abundance of thy grace, 
When wee are there : here, on this lowly ground. 
Teach mee how to repent; for that's as good 
As if thou hadst seal'd my pardon with thy blood. 



IV. 

As due, by many titles, I resigne 

Myselfe to thee, O God : first, I was made 

By thee, and for thee ; and when I was decay'd. 

Thy blood bought that the which before was 

thine. 
I am thy sonne, made with thyselfe to shine ; 
Thy servant, whose paines thou hast still repaid ; 
Thy sheepe, thine image; and, till I betray 'd 



10 JOHN DONNE. 



Myselfe, a temple of thy Spirit divine. 
Why doth the devil then usurpe on mee ? 
Why doth he steale, nay, ravish that's thy right? 
Except thou rise, and for thy own worke fight, 
Oh, I shall soone despaire, when I doe see 
That thou lov'st mankind well, yet wilt not chuse 

me ; 
And Satan hates mee, yet is loth to lose mee. 

V. 

This is my playe's last scene ; here heavens appoint 
My pilgrimage's last mile ; and my race 
Idly, yet quickly runne, hath this last pace. 
My span's last inch, my minute's latest point, 
And gluttonous death will instantly unjoynt 
My body and my soule, and I shall sleepe a space; 
But my ever-waking part shall see that face, 
Whose feare already shakes my every joynt : 
Then, as my soule to heaven, her first seate, takes 

flight, 
And earth-borne body in the earth shall dwell ; 
So fall my sinnes, that all may have their right, 
To where they are bred, and would presse mee, — 

to hell. 
Impute me righteous ; thus purged of evill ; 
For thus I leave the world, the flesh, the devill. 

VI. 

Spit in my face, you Jewes, and pierce my side ; 
Buff'et and scoffe, scourge and crucifie mee ; 
For I have sinn'd, and sinn'd, and onely hee 
Who could do no iniquitie hath dyed. 
But by my death can not be satisfied 
My sinnes, which passe the Jewes' impiety. 
They kill'd once an inglorious man ; but I 
Crucifie him daily, being now glorified. 



HOLY SONNETS. 11 



O let mee then his strange love still admire : 
Kings pardon, but he bore our punishment: 
And Jacob came cloth'd in vile harsh attire 
But to supplant, and with gainfull intent : 
God cloth'd himselte in vile man's flesh, that so 
He miglit be vveake enough to suff^er woe. 

VII. 

Death, be not proud ; thou some have called thee 
Mighty and dreadfull, for thou art not so ; 
For those whom thou think'st thou dost overthrow 
Die not, poore Death, nor yet canst thou kill mee : 
From rest and sleepe, which but thy pictures bee. 
Much pleasure, then from thee much more, must 

flow, 
And soonest our best men with thee doe goe — 
Rest of their bones, and soules' deliverie. 
Thou art slave to fate, chance, kings, and desperate 

men. 
And doth with poyson, warre, and sicknesse dwell ; 
And poppie, or charmes, can make us sleepe as 

well. 
And better than thy stroake. Why swell'st thou 

then ? 
Our short sleepe past, wee wake eternally. 
And Death shall be no more : Death, thou shalt die. 



A HYMNE TO GOD THE FATHER. 

Wilt thou forgive that sinne where I begunne, 
Which was my sinne, though it were done before ? 
Wilt thou forgive that sinne, through which I 

runne, 
And do runne still, thou still I do deplore ? 

When thou hast done, thou hast not done. 
For I have more. 



12 



JOHN DONNE. 



Wilt thou forgive that sinne which I have vvoune 
Otliers to sinne ? and made my sinne their doore ? 
Wilt thou forgive that sinne which I did shunne 
A yeare or two, but wallowed in a score ? 

When thou hast done, thou hast not done. 
For I have more. 

I have a sinne of feare, that when I have spunne 
My last thred I shall perish on the shore : 
But svveare by thyselfe that at my death thy sonne 
Shall shine as he shines now and heretofore ; 
And having done that, thou hast done — 
1 feare no more. 



HYMNE TO CHRIST AT THE AUTHOR'S 
LAST GOING INTO GERMANY. 

In what tome ship soever I embarke, 
That ship shall be my embleme of thy arke ; 
What sea soever swallow mee, that flood 
Shall be to mee an embleme of thy blood ; 
Though thou witli clouds of anger do disguise 
Thy face, yet through that maske I know those 
eyes. 
Which though thou turne away sometimes, 
They never will despise. 

I sacrifice this iland unto thee, 
And all whom I loved there, and who loved mee ; 
When I have put our seas 'twixt them and mee, 
Put thou thy seas betwixt my sinnes and thee. 
As the tree's sap doth seeke the root below 
In winter, in my winter now I goe 
Where none but thee, th' Eternal root 
Of true love, I may know. 



HYMN TO CnUIST. 13 



Nor thou, nor thy religion do«t controule 
Tiie amourousnesse of an hamionius soule ; 
But tliou wouKlst have that love thyselfe. As tliou 
Art jealous, Lord, so I am jealous now ; 
Thou lov'st not till, from loving more, thou free 
My souie. Whoever gives, takes libertie : 
O, if thou car'st not whom I love, 
Alas, thou lov'st not mee. 

Seale then this bill of my divorce to all 
On whom those fainter beames of love did fall ; 
Marry those loves, vvhicli in youth scattered bee 
On Fame, Wit, Hopes, (false mistresses!) to thee. 
Churches are best for prayer tliat have least light : 
To see God only I goe out of sight : 
And to scape stormy dayes I chuse 
An everlasting night. 



NATIVITIE. 



Immensitie cloystered in thy deare wombe. 
Now leaves his wel-belov'd imprisonment; 
There he hath made himselfe to his intent 
Weake enough now into our world to come ; 
But O ! for thee, for him hath th' inne no roome? 
Yet lay him in this stall, and from the Orient 
Starres and wise men will travell to prevent 
Th' effects of Herod's jealous general doome : 
Seest thou, my soule, with thy liiitli's eyes, how he 
Which fils all i)lace, yet none holds him, doth lye ? 
Was not his pitty towards thee wondrous high. 
That would have need to be pittied by thee ? 
Kisse him, and with him into Egypt goe-, 
With his kinde mother, who partakes thy woe. 



14 JOHN DONNE. 



RESVRRECTION. 

MoYST with one drop of thy blood, my dry soule 
Shall — though she be now in extreme degree 
Too stony hard, and yet too fleshly — bee 
Freed by that drop from being starv'd, hard, or 

foule. 
And life, by this death abled, shall controule 
Death, whom thy death slue ; nor shall to mee 
Feare of first or last death bring miserie, 
If in thy little booke my name thou enroules : 
Flesh in that long sleep is not putrified, 
But made that there of which, and for which, 'twas. 
Nor can be other meanes be glorified. 
May then sinnes sleep, and death soone from me 

passe, 
That, wakt from both, I againe risen, may 
Salute the last, and everlasting day. 



ASCENTION. 



Salute the last, and everlasting day, 

Joy at the uprising of this Sunne and Sonne, 

Yee whose just teares, or tribulation. 

Have purely washt, or burnt your drossie clay : 

Behold the Highest, parting hence away. 

Lightens the darke clouds, which hee treads upon ; 

Nor doth hee by ascending show alone. 

But first hee, and hee first enters the way. 

O strong Ramme, which hast batter'd heaven for 

mee; 
Mild Lambe, which with thy blood hast mark'd the 

path ; 



ASCENSION. 15 



Bright Torch, which shin'st, that 1 the way may see; 
Oh ! with thy owne blood quench thy owne just 

wrath : 
And if thy Holy Spirit my muse did raise, 
Deigne at my hands this crowne of prayer and 

praise. 



THE SOULE. 

Thee, eye of heaven, this great soule envies not ; 
By thy male force is all wee have begot ; 
In the first East tiiou now begins to shine ; 
Suck'st early balme, and island spices there ; 
And wilt anon, in thy loose-rein'd careere 
At Tagus, Po, Sene, Thames, and Danon dine, 
And see at night thy Westerne land of Myne : 
Yet hast thou not more nations scene than shee. 
That before thee one day beganne to bee. 
And, thy fraill light being quenched, shall long, 
long outlive thee. 



PSALME CXXXVH. 

By Euphrates' flowry side 

We did bide, 
From deare Juda faire absented, 
Tearing the aire with our cryes ; 

And our eyes 
With their streames his streame augmented. 

When, poore Syon's dolefuU state, 

Desolate ; 
Sacked, burned, and inthrall'd, 
And the temple spoil'd, which wee 

I^Je'er should see. 
To our mirthlesse mindes wee call'd : 



16 JOHN DONNE. 



Our mute liarpes, untun'cl, unstrung, 

Up wee hung 
On greene willowes neere beside us, 
Where we, sitting all forlorne, 

Tims in scorne 
Our proud spoylers 'gan deride us: 

Come, sad captives, leave your moanes. 
And your groan es 

Under Syon's ruines bury; 

Tune your harps, and sing us layes 
In the praise 

Of your God, and let's be merry. 

Can, ah ! can we leave our moanes, 

And our groanes 
Under Syon's ruines bury ? 
Can we in this land sing layes 

In the praise 
Of our God, and here be merry ? 

No; deare Syon, if I yet 

Do forget 
Thine affliction miserable, 
Let my nimble joynts become 

Stiffe and numme, 
To touch warbling harpe unable. 

Let my tongue lose singing skill, 

Let it still 
To my parched roofe be glewed, 
If in either harpe or voice 

I rejoice 
Till thy joyes shall be renewed. 

Lord, curse Edom's traiterous kinde ; 

Beare in minde 
In our ruines how they revell'd : 



PSALM CXXXVII. 17 



Sack, kill, burne ! they cryed out still. 

Sack, burne, kill ! 
Downe with all, let all be levell'd. 

And thou Babel, when the tide 

Of thy pride. 
Now a flowing, prowe to turning; 
Victor now, shall then be thrall. 

And shall fall 
To as low an ebbe of mourning. 

Happy he who shall thee waste, 

As thou hast 
Us, without all mercy, wasted. 
And shall make thee taste and see 

What poore wee 
By thy meanes have scene and tasted. 

Happy who thy tender barnes. 

From the amies 
Of their wailing mothers tearing, 
'Gainst the walls shall dash their bones, 

Ruthlesse stones 
With their braines and blood besmearing. 



THE ANNUNTIATION AND PASSION. 

Tamely, fnaile body, abstaine to-day; to-day 
My soule eatcb twice, Christ hither and away. 
Shee sees him man, so like God made in this, 
That of them both a circle embleme is. 
Whose first and last concurre ; this doubtfull day 
Offcast or fast, Christ came and went away. 
Shee sees him nothing twice at once, who is all ; 
shee sees a cedar plant itselfe and fall ; 

[jAMtb I. POt'lS.J 2 



18 JOHN DONNE. 



Her Maker put to making; and the head 

Of life, at once, nor yet alive, yet dead. 

She sees at once the virgin mother stay 

Reclus'd at home, publique at Golgotha. 

Sad and rejoyc'd shee's seen at once, and seen 

At almost fiftie, and at scarce fifteene. 

At once a sonne is promis'd her, and gone, 

Gabriel gives Christ to her — He her to John. 

Not fully a mother, sliee 's in orbitie, 

And once the receiver and the legacie. 

All this, and all betweene, this day hath showne, 

Th' abridgement of Christ's story, which makes one 

(As in plaine maps the furthest West is East) 

Of the angels Ave and Consummatum est. 

How well the Church, God's court of faculties, 

Deales, in some times, and seldom, joy ning these ; 

As by the selfe-fix'd pole wee never doe 

Direct our course, but the next starre thereto ; 

Which sliowes where the other is, and which we 

say. 
Because it strayes not farre, doth never stray : 
So God by his Church, neerest to him wee know 
And stand firme, if wee by her motion goe ; 
His Spirit, as his fiery pillar, doth 
Leade, and his Church, as cloud, to one end both : 
This Church, by letting those daies joine, hath 

showne 
Death and conception in mankinde is one. 
Or 'twas in him the same humility. 
That he would be a man, and leave to bee : 
Or, as creation he hath made, as God, 
With the last judgement, but one period, 
His imitating spouse would joyne in one 
Manhood's extremes : He shall come, He is gone ; 
Or, as though one blood-drop, which thence did fall. 
Accepted, would have serv'd, He yet shed all ; 



THE ANNUNCIATION AND PASSION. 19 

So though the least of his paines, deeds, or words, 
Would busie a life, she all this day affords. 
This treasure then in grosse, my soule, repay, 
And in my life retaile it every day. 



GOOD FRIDAY. 

(Riding Westward. J 

Let man's soule be a spheare, and then in this 
The intelligence tliat moves devotion is ; 
And as the other sphearcs by being growne 
Subject to forraigne motion lose their owne, 
And being by others hurried every day, 
Scarce in a yeare their naturall forme obey : 
Pleasure or businesse, so our soules admit 
For their first mover, and are whirled by it. 
Hence is't that I am carry ed toward the West 
This day, when my soule's forme leads toward the 

East. 
There 1 should see a Sunne by rising set, 
And by that setting endlesse day beget. 
But that Christ on this Crosse did rise and fall, 
Sinne had eternally benighted all. 
Yet dare I almost be glad I do not see 
The spectacle of too much weight for mee. 
Who sees God's face, that is selfe life, must dye ; 
What a death were it then to see God dye I 
It made his own lieutenant Nature shrinke, 
It made his footstoole crack, and the sunne winke. 
Could I behold those hands which span the poles 
And tune all spheares at once pierc'd with those 

holes ? 
Could I behold that endlesse height which is 
Zenith to us, and our antipodes 

_ 



20 JOHN DONNE. 



Humbled below us? or that blood which is 
The seat of all our soules, if not of his, 
Made dust of dust ? or that flesh which was worne 
By God, for his apparell, rag'd and torne ? 
If on these things I durst not looke, durst I 
Upon his miserable mother cast mine eye, 
Who was God's partner here, and furnish'd thus 
Halfe of that Sacrifice which ransom'd us ? 
Though these things as 1 ride be from mine eye. 
They are present yet into my memory ; 
For that looks towards them, and thou lookst to- 
wards mee, 

Saviour, as thou hangst upon the tree : 

1 turne my backe to thee but to receive 
Corrections, till thy mercies bid thee leave. 

O thinke mee worth thine anger ; punish mee ; 
Burne off my rusts and my deformity; 
Restore thine image so much by thy grace 
That thou may'st know mee, and I'll turne my face. 



ELEGY. 



Death, I recant, and say, unsaid by mee, 
Whatere hath slip'd that might diminish thee. 
Spiritual treason, atheisme, 'tis to say 
That any can thy summons disobey. 
Th' earth's face is but thy table : there are set 
Plants, cattell, men, dishes for Death to eate. 
In a rude hunger now hee millions dravves 
Into his bloody, or plaguy, or starv'd jawes. 
Now hee will seeme to spare, and doth more wast. 
Eating the best first, well preserved to last ; 
Now wantonly he spoiles and eates us not, 
But breakes off friends, and lets us peecemeale rot. 



ELEGY. 21 

Nor will this earth serve him: he sinkesthe rleepe, 
AVliere harrnlesse fish monastique silence keepe. 
Who (were Death dead) by roes of living sand 
Might spunge that element, and make it land. 
He rounds the aire, and breakes the hymnique 

notes 
In birds, heaven's choristers, organique throats; 
Which, if they did not dye, might seeme to bee 
A tenth ranke in the heavenly hierarchic. 
O strong and long-lived deatli, how cam'stthou in? 
And how without creation didst begin ? 
Thou hast, and shalt see dead, before thou dyest, 
All the foure monarchies, and antichrist. 
How could I thinke thee nothing, that see now 
In all this All, nothing else is but thou? 
Our births and lile, vices and vertues, bee 
WastefuU consumptions, and degrees of thee. 
For we, to live, our bellows wear, and breath, 
Nor are wee mortall, dying, dead, but death. 
And thou, thou beest, O mighty bird of prey. 
So much reclaim'd by God, that thou must lay 
All that thou kill'st at his feet, yet doth hee 
Reserve but few, and leaves the most to thee ; 
And of those few, now thou hast overthrowne 
One whom thy blow makes, not ours, nor thine 

own. 
She was more stories high : hopelesse to come 
To her soule, thou hast offer'd at her lower roome. 
Her soule and body was a king and court ; 
But thou hast both of captaine mist and fort. 
As houses fall not, though the king remove. 
Bodies of saints rest for their soules above. 
Death gets 'twixt soules and bodies such a place 
As sin insinuates 'twixt just men and grace : 
Both worke a separation, no divorce. 
Her soule is gone to usher up her corse, 



22 JOHN DONNE. 



Which shall be almost another soule ; for there 
Bodies are purer than best soules are here. 
Because in lier her virtues did outgoe 
Her yeares, vvouldst thou, emulous death, do so? 
And kill her young, to thy losse ? Must the cost 
Of beauty and wit, apt to doe harme, be lost ? 
What, though thou found'st her proofe 'gainst 

sinnes of youth ? 
Oh every age a diverse sinne pursueth. 
Thou shouldst have stay'd, and taken better hold : 
Shortly ambitious ; covetous, when old, 
She might have prov'd ; and such devotion 
Might once have strayed to superstition. 
If all her vertues must have growne, yet might 
Abundant vertue have bred a proud delight. 
Had she persevered just, there would have bin 
Some that would sinne, misthinking she did sinne ; 
Such as would call her friendship love, and faine 
To sociablenesse a name profane. 
Or sinne by tempting, or, not daring that. 
By wishing, though they never told her what. 
Thus mio-ht'st thou have slain more soules, hadst 

thou not crost 
Thyselfe, and, to triumph, thine army lost. 
Yet, though these wayes be lost, thou hast left one. 
Which is immoderate griefe that she is gone. 
But we may 'scape that sinne, yet weepe as much ; 
Our teares are due because we are not such. 
Some teares that knot of friends her death must 

cost. 
Because the chaine is broke, but no linke lost. 



III. 

ANONYMOUS. 



HYMNE. 



All this niglit shrill chanticler, 
Daye's proclayming trompiter, 
Claps his wings and loudly cries, 
Mortalls, mortalls, wake and rise, 
See a wonder 
Heauen is vnder, 
From the earth is rissen a sun, 
Shines all night, though day be dun. 

Wake, O earth ! wake, euerie thing, 
Wake and heare the ioy I bring ; 
Wake and ioy for all this night, 
Heauen and euerie twinckling light ; 
All amazing 
Still stand gazing : 
Angells, powers, and all that be, 
Wake and ioy this sun to see. 

Haile, O sun! O blessed light. 
Sent into the world by night, 
Let thy rayes and heauenly powers 
Shine in this darke soule of ours. 

For most surely 

Thou art truely, 
God and man we do confess : 
Haile, O Sun of Righteousness ! 



24 ANONYMOUS. 



LINES 

From " Diuers deuout and zealous Meditations." 
Loquitur Crucifixus. 

O MAN, look what shame for thee 
Willingly I take on me : 
See my bodie scourged round, 
That it forms but all one wound, 
Hanging vp 'twixt earth and sky. 
Mocked and scorned by all goes by. 
See my arms stretched wide and open, 
And my sinews torne and broken. 
See upon the cross I hang. 
View these nails with bitter pang, 
Which my own weight doth not tear, 
But thy weighty sins I bear. 
See my head. Oh me ! forlorne. 
Pierced deepe with cruel thorne, 
Which so long thereon hath stood 
That the twig runs down with blood. 
View my feet, and see my side. 
Pierced and plowed with furrows wide. 
See, all comfort from me taken. 
Both of heauen and earth forsaken ; 
And not one, with word or deed. 
Pities me whilst here I bleed. 
Yea, they all that stand in hearing, 
Mocke me for my patient bearing. 
And with scoffs augment my sore, 
When for bitter paine 1 roar. 
Eli 1 Eli ! I am dying ! 
Harkl they mocke me too for crying 
This I beare for thine amiss : 
Was there euer paine like this ? 
Yea, and I do most fear that, 
Lest thou, man, shouldst prove ingrat- 
Now thou dost but make me smart ; 
But in tliat thou killst my heart. 



IV. 
SIMION GRAHAME. 



STANZAS. 



Each hath his time vvliom Fortune will aduance, 
Whose fickle wheel runs restless round ahout; 
Some flattering lye oft changeth others' chance, 
Dangers deceipt in guiltie harts breeds doubt. 

It's seene 

What yet hath beene, 
With tract of time to passe 

And change 

Of fortune strange 
At last hath turn'd their glasse. 

Enuie triumphs on tops of high estate, 
All ouer hung with veiles of feigned show ; 
Man climbes aboue the course of such conceates. 
That loftie-like they loath to look below. 

And what ? 

All's hazard that 
We seek on dice to set; 

For some 

To heights do come 
That fall in danger's net. 

1 he gallant man, if poore, hee's thought a wretch, 

His virtue rare is held in high disdayne ; 

The greatest fool is wise if he be ritch. 

And wisdonie flowes from his lunatique brayne. 

Thus see 

Rare spirits to bee 
Of no account at all ; 



26 SIMION GRAHAME. 

Disgrace 

Hath got such place, 
Each joyes at other's fall. 

The brib'rous minde who makes a god of gould, 
He scornes to plead without he haue reward ; 
Then poore men's suites at highest rates are sould, 
Whilst Aurice damn'd, nor Truth have no regard : 

For heere 

He hath no feare 
Of God's consuming curse : 

His gaines 

Doth pull with paines 
Plagues from the poore man's purse. 

The furious flames of Sodom's sodaine fire 

With feruent force consume vaine pride to 

nought ; 
With wings of wax let soaring him aspire 
Aboue the starres of his ambition's thought ; 
And so 

When hee doth go 
On top of pride's high glory, 
Then shall 
His sodain fall 
Become the world's sad story. 

Ingratitude, that ill-ill-fauored ill, 
In noble breastes hath builded castles strong ; 
Obliuion setts vp troph's that still 
Bewrayes the filthy vildeness of that wrong : 

Ah 1 minde 

Where deu'llish kinde 
Ingratitude doth dwell ; 

That ill 

Coequals still 
The greatest ill in hell. 



STANZAS. 27 



On poyson's filth contagious error spreads, 
Heauen's spotless eyes look as amaz'd with 

wonder ; 
Their viprous mindes such raging horror breedes, 
To teare religion's virgin roabes asunder. 
What then ? 

wicked men, 
And hel's eternal, pray : 

Go mourn e, 
And in time tume 
From your erronius way. 

What course wants crosse ? What kind of state 

wants strife ? 
What worldling yet would euer seem content ? 
What haue we heere in this our thwarting life ? 
Joy, beautie, honour, loue, like smoak are spent. 

1 say, 

Time goes away, 
Without returne againe : 

How wise 

Who can despise 
These worldly vapours vaine ! 



V. 
W. A. 



HYMNE. 

What a gratious God haue wee ! 
In his guiftes of grace how free ! 
How intent our prayers to heare, 
And to them that pray how neare ! 
How to balmie mercie prone, 
And to kind compassion ! 
How regardfully he wakes 
For his chosen seruantes' sakes I 
How he giues them grace to pray, 
And then to their suites giues way ! 
How he prompts each good desire, 
And blowes up that sparke to fire. 
He hath sett no greater task 
To obtaine of him but " Ask." 
No exacter search to find, 
But to seeke with humble mind : 
No more paines heauen to vnlock, 
But with spotles handes to knock — 
Yet he ioyes to see man presse him, 
And to wrastle till he bless him. 



VI. 

B. N. 

I WOULD AND WOULD NOT. 

I WOULD I were a man of greatest power 
Tliat swaies a scepter on this world's great masse, 
That I might sit on toppe of pleasure's tower, 
And make my will my way, where ere I passe — 
That law might have her being from mv breath : 
My smile might be a life, my frowne a death. 

And yet I would not ; for then doe I feare 

Envy or malice would betray my trust, 

And some vile spirit, though against the haire, 

Would seeke to lay mine honor in the dust : 

Treason or murther would beset me so, 

I should not knowe who were my friend or foe. 

No, I doe rather wish the lowe estate, 
And be an honest man of meane degree ; 
Belov'd for good, and give no cause of hate. 
And clime no higher than a hawthorne-tree ; 
Pay every man his owne, give reason right. 
And worke all day, and take my rest at night. 

For sure in courtes are worlds of costly cares, 

That comber reason in his course of rest : 

Let me but learne how thrift both spends and 

spares. 
And make enough as good as any feast, 
And fast and pray — my dales may have good end, 
And welcome all that pleaseth God to send ! 

I would I were a player, and could act 
As many parts as came upon a stage ; 



80 B.N. 

And in my braine could make a full compact 
Of all that passeth betwixt youth and age ; 
That I might have five shares in every play, 
And let them laugh that bear the bell away. 

And yet I would not ; for then doe I feare 
If I should gall some gooscappe with my speech, 
That he would fret and fume, and chafe and sweare, 
As if some flea had bit him by the breech ; 
And in some passion, or strange agonie, 
Disturbe both mee and all the com panic. 

I would I were a poet, and could write 
The passage of this paltry world in rime ; 
And talke of warres and many a valiant fight. 
And how the captain es did to honour clime ; 
Of wise and faire, of gratious, vertuous, kinde. 
And of the bounty of a noble minde. 

But speake but little of the life of love, 
Because it is a thing so harde to finde : 
And touch but little at the turtle-dove, 
Seeing there are but few byrdes of that kinde : 
And libell against lewde and wicked harts. 
That on the earth do play the devill's parts. 

And yet I would not ; for then would my braines 
Be with a world of toyes intoxicate ; 
And I should fall upon a thousand vaines 
Of this and that, and well I know not what : 
When some would say, that saw my frantick fittes. 
Surely the poet is beside his wittes. 

I would I were a man of warlike might, 

And had the title of a general. 

To point the captaines every one their fight. 

Where should the vanguard and the rereward fall : 

W ho should be leaders of the forlorne hope. 

And who the entrance to the army ope. 



I WOULD AND WOULD NOT. 31 

And yet I would not ; for then I might see 

How discontent might cause a mutinie, 

Whereby the army might in danger be 

To be surprized by the enemie, 

Or by the loss of men, for honor's gaine, 

To wound my conscience with a bloody paine. 

No ; I had rather praise the course of peace, 
And study how to helpe to holde the same ; 
And how soone quarrels ill begun may cease, 
And how to keepe accord in quiet frame : 
That old and young may live contented so, 
That to their graves may all in quiet goe. 

I would I were an excellent divine, 

That had the Bible at my fingers' ends : 

The world might lieare out of this mouth of mine 

How God did make his enemies his friends : 

I were so foUow'de as if none but I 

Could plainely speake of true divinity. 

And yet I would not ; for then ten to one 

I should be call'd but a precisian, 

Or formalist ; and might go preach alone 

Unto my holy brother puritan ; 

And so be flouted for my zealous love. 

In taking pains for other men's behove. 

No ; I had rather read and understand 
The rules of grace, that have the learned led 
To know the power of the Almighty hand, 
And with what foode the blessed flocke are fed ; 
Rather than with a thund'ring and long praier 
To leade into presumption or despaire. 

To tell you truely what I wish to be, 
And never would be other, if I could. 
But in the comfort of the heavens' decree 
In soule and body that I ever should — 



32 B. N. 

Though in the world, not to the world to live, 
But to my God my service wholly give. 

This would I be, and would none other be. 

But a religious servant of my God ; 

And know there is none other God but He, 

And willingly to suffer mercy's rod ; 

Joy in his grace, and live but in his love. 

And seeke my blisse but in the heaven above. 

And I would frame a kind of faithfull praier 
For all estates within the state of grace ; 
That carefull love might never know despaire, 
No servile feare might faithfull love deface : 
And this would I both day and night devise, 
To make my humble spirits exercise. 

And I would read the rules of sacred life ; 

Perswade the troubled soule to patience ; 

The husband care, and comfort to the wife. 

To childe and servant due obedience, 

Faith to the friend, and to the neighbour peace ; 

That love might live, and quarrels all may cease. 

Pray for the health of all that are diseased, 
Confession unto all that are convicted, 
And patience unto all that are displeased, 
And comfort unto all that are afflicted, 
And mercy unto all that have offended, 
And grace to all, that all may be amended. 

Flatter not folly with an idle faith. 

Nor let earth stand upon her own desart ; 

But shewe what wisdome in the Scripture saith. 

The fruitfuU hand doth shew the faithfull heart ; 

Believe the word, and thereto bend thy will. 

And teach obedience for a blessed skill. 

Chide sinners as the father doth his childe, 
And keepe them in the awe of loving feare ; 



I WOULD AND WOULD NOT. 33 



Make sin most hateful), but in words be milde, 
That humble patience may the better heare ; 
And wounded conscience may receive reliet'e, 
When true repentance pleads the sinner's griefe. 

Yet flatter not the foul delight of sinne. 

But make it loathsome in the eie of love, 

And seeke the heart with holy thoughts to winne 

Unto the best way to the soul's behove : 

So teach, so live, that both in word and deede 

The world may joy thy heavenly rules to reade. 

Heale the infect of sinne with oile of grace, 
And wash the soule with true Contrition's teares ; 
And when Confession shews her heavy case, 
Deliver Faith from all infernal feares, 
That when high Justice threatens sin with death, 
Mercy again may give Repentance breath. 

Thus would I spend in service of my God 

The ling'ring howres of these few dales of mine, 

To shew how sin and death are overtrod. 

But by the vertue of the power divine ; 

Our thoughts but vaine, our substance slime and 

dust. 
And only Christ for our eternal trust ! 

This would I be ; and say * would not' no more, 

But onlv — not be otherwise than this: 

All in effect, but, as I said before. 

The life in that life's kingdome's love of His, 

My glorious God, whose grace all comfort gives, 

Than be on earth the greatest man that lives. 



[jAMES I. POETS.] 



VII. 
GILES FLETCHER. 



A DESCRIPTION OF JUSTICE. 

But Justice had no sooner Mercv seen, 
Smoothing the wrinkles of her Father's brow, 
But up she starts and throwes herself between : 
As when a vapour from a moory slough, 
Meeting with fresh Eoiis, that but now 

Open'd the world, which all in darknesse lay. 
Doth heaven's bright face of his rayes disarray, 
And sads the smiling orient of the springing day. 

She was a virgin of austere regard, 
Not as the world esteemes her, deaf and blinde, 
But as the eagle, that hath oft compared 
Her eye with heav'n's, so, and more brightly shin'd 
Her lamping sight; for she the same could wind 
Into the solid heart, and with her eares 
The silence of the thought loud speaking heares, 
And in one hand a pair of even scoals she weares. 

No riot of affection revell kept 
Within her breast, but a still apathy 
Possessed all her soul, which softly slept 
Securely without tempest — no sad crie 
Awakes her pitie, but wrong'd Povertie, 

Sending his eyes to heav'n swimming in teares, 
With hideous clamours ever struck her eares, 
Whetting the blazing sword that in her hand she 
beares. 

The winged lightning is h(;r Mercury, 

And round about her mightie thunders sound : 



A DESCRIPTION OF JUSTICE. 35 



Impatient of himself, lies pining by 

Pale Sickness, with his kercher'd head iipwound, 

And thousand noisome plagues attend her round ; 
But if her clovvdie brow but once grow foul, 
The flints do melt, and rocks to water rowl, 

And aide mountains shake, and frighted shadows 
howl. 

Famine, and bloodies Care, and bloodie war, 
Want, and the want of knowledge how to use. 
Abundance, Age, and Fear, that runnes afarre 
Before his fellow Grief, that aye pursues 
His winged steps ; for who would not refuse 
Griefs companie, a dull and rawbon'd spright. 
That lanks the cheeks, and pales the freshest 
sight, 
Unbosoming the cheerefull breast of all delight. 

Before this cursed throng goes Ignorance, 
That needs will leade the way he cannot see : 
And, after all, Death doth his flag advance. 
And, in the midst, Strife still would roguing be, 
Whose ragged flesh and cl oaths did well agree ; 
And round about amazed Horror flies. 
And, over all, Shame veils his guiltie eyes, 
And underneath Hell's hungrie throat still yawn- 
ing lies. 

Upon two stonie tables, spread before her, 
She lean'd her bosome, more than stonie hard ; 
There slept th' unpartiall judge, and strict restorer 
Of wrong or right, with pain or with reward ; 
There hung the score of all our debts, the card 

Wliere good and bad, and life and death, were 
painted : 

Was never heart of mortall so untainted. 
But when that scroul was read, with thousand ter- 
rors fainted. 



36 GILES FLETCHER. 

Witness the thunder that mount Sinai heard, 
When all the hill with fierie clouds did flame, 
And vvand'ring Israel, with the sight afeard, 
Blinded with seeing, durst not touch the same, 
But like a wood of shaking leaves became. 
On this dread Justice, she, the living law, 
Bowing herself, with a majestique awe, [draw. 
All heaven, to heare her speech, did into silence 

Dread Lord of spirits, well thou didst devise 

To fling the world's rude dunghill^, and the drosse 

Of the old Chaos, furthest from the skies, 

And thine own seat, that heare the childe of losse. 

Of all the lower heav'n the curse and crosse ; 

That wretch, beast, caytive, monster — man, 
might spend, 

(Proud of the mire, in which his soul is pend) 
Clodded in lumps of clay, his wearie life to end. 

His bodie dust — where grew such cause of pride ? 

His soul thy image — what could he envie ? 

Himself most happie, if he so would bide : 

Now grown most wretched, who can remedie ? 

He slew himself, himself the enemie. 
That his own soul would her own murder wreak, — 
If I were silent, heaven and earth would speak : 

And, if all fail'd, these stones would into clamours 
break. 

How many darts made furrows in his side, 
When she, that out of his own side was made. 
Gave feathers to tlieir flight ! where was the pride 
Of their new knowledge? whither did it fade. 
When, running from thy voice into the shade. 
He fled thy sight, himself of sight bereav'd ; 
And for his shield a leavie armour weav'd. 
With which, vain man, he thought, God's eies to 
have deceivM ? 



A DESCRIPTION OF JUSTICE. 37 

And well he might delude those eies, that see 
Ami judge by colours : for wlio ever savv 
A man of leaves, a reasonable tree ? 
But those that from this stock their life did draw, 
Soon made their father godly, and by law 
Proclaimed trees almighty: gods of wood, 
Of stocks, and stones, with crowns of laurell 
stood 
Templed, and fed by fathers with their children's 
bloud. 

The sparkling fanes, that burn in beaten gold, 
And, like the starres of heaven in midst of night. 
Black Egypt as her mirrours, doth behold, 
Are but the dens where idol-snakes delight 
Again to cover Satan from their sight : 

Yet these are all their gods, to whom they vie 
The crocodile, the cock, the rat, the flie — 
Fit gods, indeed, for such men to be served by. 

The fire, the winde, the sea, the sunne and 

moon. 
The flitting aire, and the swift-winged houres. 
And all the watchmen, that so nimbly runne 
And sentinel about the walled towers 
Of the world's citie in their heav'nly bowrs; 
And, lest their pleasant gods should want de- 
light, 
Neptune spues out the lady Aphrodite, 
And but in heav'n proud Juno's peacocks scorn 
to lite. 

The senselesse earth, the serpent, dog, and cat, 
And, worse than all these, man, and worst of 

men. 
Usurping Jove, and swilling Bacchus fat. 
And drunk with the vine's purple bloud, and then 
The fiend himself tbey conjure from his den, 



88 GILES FLETCHER. 

Because he onely yet remain'd to be 
Worse than the worst of men — they flee from 
thee, 
And weare his altar-stones out with tlieir pliant 

knee. 
All that he speaks (and all he speaks are lies) 
Are oracles ; *tis he (that wounded all) 
Cures all their wounds ; he (that puts out their eyes) 
That gives them light; he (that death first did call 
Into the world) that with his orizall 

Inspirits earth : he Heav'n's alseeing eye, 
In earth's great prophet, he, whom rest doth flie, 
That on salt billows doth, as pillows, sleeping lie. 

But let him in his cabin restlesse rest, 
The dungeon of dark flames, and freezing fire, 
Justice in heav'n against man makes request 
To God, and of his angels doth require 
Sinne's punishment : if what I did desire, 
Or who, or against whom, or why or where, 
Of, or before whom ignorant I were. 
Then should my speech their sands of sins to 
mountains reare. 

Were not the heav*ns pure, in whose courts I sue ; 

The Judge to whom I sue, just to requite him; 

The cause for sinne, the punishment most due; 

Justice herself the plaintifl'e to encUte him ; 

The angels holy, before whom I cite him ; 

He against whom, wicked, unjust, impure ; — 
Then might he sinfull live, and die secure. 

Or triall might escape, or triall might endure. 

The judge might partiall be, and over-prayed ; 
The place appeal'd from, in whose courts he sues; 
The fault excus'd, or punishment delay'd, 
The parties self-accus'd, that did accuse ; 
Angels for pardon might their prayers use : 



A. DESCRIPTION OF JUSTICE. 39 



But now no starre can shine, no hope be got. 
Most wretched creature, if he knew his lot, — 
And yet more wretched t'arre because he knovves 
it not. 

What should I tell how barren earth is grown 
All for to starve her cliildren ? didst not thou 
Water witli heav'nly showers her wombe unsown, 
And drop down clouds of flow'rs — didst not thou 

bowe 
Tliine easie ear unto the plowman's vow — 

Long might he look, and look, and look in vain, 
Might load his harvest in an empty wain, 
And beat the woods, to finde the poor oak's hun- 
gry grain. 

The swelling sea seethes in his angry waves, 
And smites the earth, that dares the traitors 

nourish ; 
Yet oft his thunder their light cork outbraves. 
Mowing the mountains, on whose temples flourish 
Whole woods of garlands; and their pride to 

cherish, 
Plowe through the seas green fields, and, nets 

display. 
To catch the flying windes, and steal away, 
Cooz'ning the greedie sea, pris'ning their nimble 

prey. 

How often have I seen the waving pine. 
Tost on a waterie mountain, knock his head 
At heav'n's too patient gates, and with salt brine 
Quench the moon's burning horns ; and safely fled 
From heav'n's revenge, her passengers, all dead 

With stiff'e astonishment, tumble to hell ! 

How oft the sea all earth would overswell, 
Did not thy sandie girdle binde the mightie swell. 



40 GILES FLETCHER. 

Would not the aire be filld with streams of death, 
To poison the quick rivers of their blood, 
Did not thy vvindes fan, with their panting breath, 
The flitting region ? would not th' hastie flood 
Emptie itself into the sea's wide wood. 

Didst not thou leade it wandring from his way, 
To give men drink, and make his waters stray, 
To fresh the flowrie medows, through whose fields 
they play ? 

Who makes the sources of the silver fountains 
From the flint's mouth and rockie valleys slide, 
Thickning the airie bowels of the mountains ? 
Who hath the wilde beards of the forrest tide 
In their cold dens, making them hungry bide 
Till man to rest be laid ? can beastly he 
That should have most sense, onely senseles be, 
And all things else, beside himself, so awfull see? 

Were he not wilder than the savage beast. 
Prouder than haughty hills, harder than rocks. 
Colder than fountains from their springs releast, 
Lighter than aire, blinder than senseles stocks, 
More changing then the river's curling locks,— 
If reason would n ot, sense would soon reprove him. 
And unto shame, if not to sorrow, move him. 
To see cold flouds, wilde beasts, dull stocks, hard 
stones, outlove him. 

Under the weight of sinne the earth did fall. 
And swallowed Dathan ; and the raging winde, 
And stormie sea, and gaping whale, did call 
For Jonas ; and the aire did bullets finde. 
And shot from heav'n a stony showre, to grinde 

Tlie five proud kings, that for their idols fought ; 

The sunne itself stood still to fight it out. 
And fire from heav'n flew down, when sinne to 
heav'n did shout. 



A DESCRIPTION OF JUSTICE. 41 

Should any to himself for safety flie ? 
The way to save himself, if any were. 
Were to fly from himself: sliould he relie 
Upon the promise of his wife ? but there 
What can he see, but that he most may fear, 

A siren, sweet to death ? upon his friends ? 

Who that he needs, or that he hath not, lends ; 
Or wanting aid himself, aid to another sends ? 

His strength ? but dust : his pleasure ? cause of 

pain ; 
His hope ? false courtier : youth or beauty ? brittle : 
Intreatie ? fond : repentance ? late and vain : 
Just recom pence ? the world were all too little : 
Thy love ? he hath no title to a tittle : 

Hell's force ? in vain her furies hell shall gather: 
His servants, kinsmen, or his children rather? 
His childe, if good, shall judge ; if bad, shall curse 
his father. 

His life ? that brings him to his end, and leaves 

him : 
His end ? that leaves him to begin his wo : 
His goods ? what good in that, that so deceives 

him ? 
His gods of wood ? their feet, alas ! are slow 
That go to help, that must be helpt to go : 

Honour? great worth? ah, little worth they be 
Unto their owners : wit ? that makes him see 
He wanted wit, that thought he had it, wanting 

thee. 

The sea to drink him quick ? that casts his dead : 
Angels to spare ? they punish : night to hide ? 
The world shall bum in light : the heav'ns to spread 
Their wings to save him ? heav'n itself shall slide. 
And rowl away like melting starres, that glide 



42 GILES FLETCHER. 



Along their oylie threeds : his minde pursues 

him : 
His house to shrowd, or hills to fall, and bruise 
him ? 
As seargeants both attache, and witnesses accuse 
him. 

Whatneed I urge — whattheymustneeds confesse — 
Sentence on them, condemn'd by their own lust? 
I crave no more, and thou canst give no lesse. 
Than death to dead men, justice to unjust; 
Shame to most shamefuU, and most shameles dust: 
But if thy Mercy needs will spare her friends. 
Let Mercy there begin, where Justice ends. 
'Tis cruell Mercy that the wrong from right defends. 

She ended, and the heavenly hierarchies. 
Burning in zeal, thickly imlDranded^ were ; 
Like to an armie that allarum cries, 
And every one shakes his ydraded^ speare, 
And the Almightie's self, as he would teare 
The Earth, and her firm basis quite in sunder, 
Flam'd all in just revenge, and mightie thunder; 
Heav'n stole itself from Earth by clouds that 
moisten'd under. 



A DESCRIPTION OF MERCY. 

As when the cheerfull sunne, clamping wide 
Glads all the world with his uprising ray. 
And wooes the widow'd earth afresh to pride, 
And paints her bosome with the flovvrie May, 
Her silent sister steals him quite away, 



^ Mustered in amis. '^ Dreaded, or terrific. 



A DESCRIPTION OF MERCY. 43 



Wrapt in a sable cloud, from mortall eyes : 
The hastie starres at noon begin to rise, 
And headlong to his early roost the sparrow flies: 

But soon as he again disshadow'd is, 
Restoring the blind world his blemisht sight, 
As though another day were newly ris, 
The coozned birds busily take their flight, 
And wonder at the shortnesse of the night; 
So Mercie once againe herself displayes 
Out from her sister's cloud, and open layes 
Those sunshine looks, whose beams would dim a 
thousand dayes. 

How may a worm, that crawls along the dust, 
Clamber the azure mountains, thrown so high, 
And fetch from thence thy fair idea just. 
That in those sunny courts doth hidden lie, 
Cloath'd with such light as blindes the angel's eye? 
How may weak mortall ever hope to file 
His unsmooth tongue, and his depostrate stile? 
O raise thou from his corse thy now entomb'd 
exile ! 

One touch would rouze me from my sluggish 

hearse, 
One word would call me to my wished home, 
One look would poUsh my afflicted verse, 
One thought would steal my soul from her thick 

lome, 
And force it wandring up to heav'n to come, 
There to importune, and to beg apace 
One happy favour of thy sacred grace, 
To see — what though it lose her eyes? — to see 
thy face. 

If any ask why roses please the sight ? 

Because their leaves upon thy cheeks do bowre : 



44 



GILES FLETCHER. 



If any ask why lilies are so white ? 

Because their blossomes in thy hand do flowre : 

Or why sweet plants so gratefuU odours showre ? 
It is because thy breath so like they be : 
Or why the orient sunne so bright We see ? 

What reason can we give but from thine eies and 
thee ? 

RosM in all lovely crimsin are thy cheeks 
Where beauties indeflourishing abide, 
And as to passe his fellow either seeks, 
Seems both do blush at one another's pride ; 
And on thine eyelids, waiting thee beside, 
Ten thousand graces sit, and when they move 
To earth their amourous belgards from above. 
They flie from heav'n, and on their wings convey 
thy love. 

All of discolour'd plumes their wings are made. 
And with so wondrous art the quills are wrought. 
That whensoere they cut the ayrie glad. 
The winde into their hollow pipes is caught, 
As seems the spheres with them they down have 
brought : 
Like to the sev'n-fold reed of Arcadie 
Which Pan of Syrinx made, when slie did flie 
To Ladon sands, and at his sighs sung merrily. 

As melting h6ny dropping from the combe, 
So still the words that spring between thy lips ; 
Thy lips where smiling sweetnesse keeps her home, 
And heav'nly eloquence pure manna sips : 
He that his pen but in that fountain dips. 
How nimbly will the golden phrases flie. 
And shed forth streams of choicest rhetoric, 
Welling celestiall torrents out of poesie ! 

Like as the thirstie land, in summer's heat. 
Calls to the clouds, and gapes at ev'ry showre 



A DESCRIPTION OF MERCY. 45 

As though her liungry clefts all heav'n would eat, 
Which it high God into her hosome poure, 
Thougli much refresht, yet more she could de- 
voure ; 
So hang the greedie eares of angels sweet, 
And ev'ry breath a thousand Cupids meet. 
Some flying in, some out, and all about her fleet. 

Upon her breast Delight doth softly sleep, 

And of eternal joy is brought abed, 

Those snowie mountelets, through which do creep 

The milkie rivers, that are inly bred 

In silver cisterns, and themselves do shed 
To wearie travellers, in heat of day 
To quench their fierie tliirst, and to allay 

With dropping nectar-flouds the furie of their way. 

If any wander, thou dost call him back ; 

If any be not forward, thou incit'st him ; 

Thou dost expect, if any should grow slack ; 

If any seem but willing, thou invit'st him ; 

Or if he do off'end thee, thou acquit'st him : 
Thou find'st the lost, and follow'st him that flies. 
Healing the sick, and quickning him that dies. 

Thou art the lame man's friendly staff'e, the blinde 
man's eyes. 

So fair thou art, that all would thee behold ; 
But none can thee behold, thou art so fair ; 
Pardon, O pardon then thy vassall bold, 
That with poore shadows strives thee to compare. 
And match the things, which he knows matchlesse 
are. 
O thou vive min'our of celestiall grace, 
How can frail colours pourtraict out thy face. 
Or paint in flesh thy beautie in such 'semblance 
base ? 



4)6 GILES FLETCHER. 

Her upper garment was a silken lawn, 
With needlework richly embroidered, 
Which she herself with her own had drawn, 
And all the world therein had pourtrayed, 
With threeds so fresh and lively coloured. 

That seeni'd the world she new created there ; 

And the mistaken eye would rashly sweare 
The silken trees did grow, and the beasts living 
were. 

Low at her feet the Earth was cast alone, 
(As though to kisse her foot it did aspire, 
And gave itself for her to tread upon,) 
With so unlike and different attire. 
That ev'ry one that saw it did admire 

What it might be, was of so various hew ; 

For to itself it oft so diverse grew. 
That still it seem'd the same, and still it seem'd a 
new. 

And here and there few men she scattered, 
(That in their thought the world esteem but small 
And themselves great,) but she with one fine tlireed 
So short, and small, and slender, wove them all. 
That like a sort of busy ants, that crawl 

About some molehill, so they wandered ; 

And round about the waving sea was shed: 
But, for the silver sands, small pearls were sprin- 
kled. 

So curiously the underwork did creep. 
And curling circlets so well shadowed lay, 
That afar off the waters seem'd to sleep ; 
But those that neare the margin pearl did play, 
Hoarcely en waved were with hastie sway, 

As though they meant to rock the gentle eare, 
And hush the former that enslumbred were : 
And here a dangerous rock the flying ships did fear. 



A DESCRIPTION OF MERCT. 47 

High in tlie airie element tliere liung 
Anotlier cloudy sea, tliat did disdain 
(As though his purer waves from heaven sprung) 
To crawl on e.irth, as dotii the sluggish main : 
But it the earth would water with his rain, 

That eh'd and flow'd, as winde and season would, 
And ott the sunne would cleave the limber 
mould. 
To alabaster rocks, that in the liquid rowi'd. 

Beneath those sunny banks a darker cloud, 
Dropping with thicker dew, did melt apace. 
And bent itself into a hollow shroud, 
On which, if Mercy did but cast her face, 
A thousand colours did the bow enchace, 
That wonder was to see the silk distain'd 
With the resplendance from her beauty gain'd, 
And Iris paints her locks with beams so lively 
feign'd. 

About her head a Cyprus heav'n she wore, 
Spread like a veil upheld with silver wire, 
In which the starres so burnt in golden ore, 
As seem'd the azure web was all on fire : 
But hastily, to quench their sparkling ire, 
A floud of milk came rowling up the shore, 
That on his curded wave swift Argus bore. 
And the immortall swan, that did her life deplore. 

Yet strange it was so many starres to see, 
Without a sunne to give their tapers light : 
Vet strange it was not, that it so should be ; 
For, where the sunne centers himself by right. 
Her face and locks ()id flame, that at the sight 
The heav'nly veil, that else should nimbly move, 
Forgot his flight, and all incensed with love. 
With wonder and amazement, did her beauty 
prove. 



48 GILES FLETCHER. 

Over her hung a canopie of state, 
Not of rich tissevv, nor of spangled gold, 
But of a substance though not animate. 
Yet of a heav'nly and spirituall mold. 
That onely eyes of spirits might behold ; 
Such light as from main rocks of diamound, 
Shooting their sparks at Phoebus, would rebound. 
And little angels, holding hands, danct all around. 

Seemed those little sprights, through nimblesse bold. 
The stately canopy bore on their wings. 
But them itself, as pendants, did uphold, 
Besides the crowns of many famous kings : 
Among the rest, there David ever sings. 

And now, with yeares grown young, renews his 
layes 

Unto his golden harp, and dities playes, 
Psalming aloud in well-tun'd songs his Maker's 
praise. 

Thou Self- idea of all joyes to come, 
Whose love is such, would make the rudest speak, 
Whose love is such, would make the wisest dumbe, 
O, when wilt thou tliy too long silence break. 
And overcome the strong to save the weak ? 
If thou no weapons hast, thine eyes will wound 
Th'Almigh tie's self, that now stick on the ground, 
As though some blessed object there did them 
empound. 

Ah ! miserable abject of disgrace, 

What happiness is in thy miserie ! 

I both must pitie and envie thy case ; 

For she, that is the glory of the skie, 

Leaves heaven blinde, to fix on thee her eye. 
Yet her(though Mercie's self esteems not small) 
The world despis'd, they her Repentance call, 

And she herself despises, and the world, and all. 



A DESCRIPTION OF MERCY. 4.9 

Deeply, alas ! empassioned she stood, 
To see a flaming brand tost up from hell, 
Boyling her heart in her own lustfull blood, 
That oft for torment she would loudly yell : 
Now slie would sighing sit, and now she fell 

Crouching upon the ground, in sackcloth trust' ; 

Early and late she played, and fast she must, 
And all her hair hung full of ashes and of dust. 

Of all most hated, yet hated most of all 
Of her own self she was ; disconsolat 
(As though her flesh did but infimerall 
Her buried ghost) she in an arbour sat 
Of thornie briar, weeping her cursed state ; 

And her before a hastie river fled. 

Which her blinde eyes with faithfull penance 
fed, 
And, all about, the grasse with teares hung down 
his head. 

Her eyes, though blinde abroad, at home kept 

fast. 
Inwards they tum'd, and lookt into her head, 
At which she often started as agast. 
To see so fearfull spectacles of dread ; 
And with one hand her breast she martyred, 

Wounding her heart the same to mortifie ; 

The other a fair damsell held her by, 
Which if but once let go, she sunk immediatly. 

But Faith was quick, and nimble as the heav'n, 
As if of love and light she all had been, 
And though of present sight her sense were reav'n, 
Yet she could see the things could not be seen : 
Beyond the starres, as nothing were between, 

^ trussed. 

[jAMES I. POETS.] 4 



50 GILES FLETCHER. 

She fixed her sight, disdaining things below : 
Into the sea she could a mountain throw, 
And make the sunne to stand, and waters back- 
wards flow. 

Such when as Mercy her beheld from high. 
In a dark valley, drown'd with her own teares. 
One of her graces she sent hastily, 
Smiling Eirene\ that a garland weares 
Of guilded olive on her fairer haires. 

To crown the fainting soul's true sacrifice, 
Whom when as sad Repentance coming spies. 
The holy desperado wipt her smihng eyes. 

But Mercie felt a kind remorse to runne 
Through her soft vains, and therefore, hying fast 
To give an end to silence, thus begunne : — 
" Aye-honour'd Father, if no joy thou hast 
But to reward desert, reward at last." 

The devil's voice spoke with a serpent's tongue, 

Fit to hisse out the words so deadly stung. 
And let him die, death's bitter charms so sweetly 

sung. 
He was the father of that hopeless season, 
That, to serve other gods, forgot their own. 
The reason was, thou wast above their reason : 
They would have any gods rather than none, 
A beastly serpent, or a senseless stone : 

And these, as Justice hates, so I deplore ; 

But the upplowed heart, all rent and tore. 
Thou wounded by itself, I gladly would restore. 

He was but dust ; why fear'd he not to fall ? 
And, being fall'n, how can he hope to live ? 
Cannot the hand destroy him that made all .' 
Could he not take away, as well as give ? 

* Peace. 



A DESCRIPTION OF MERCY. 51 

SlioiiM man deprave, and sh(3uld not God deprive ? 
U as it not all the world's deeeivin<^ spirit 
(That, bladder'd up with pride of his own merit. 

Fell in his rise,) that him of heav'n did disinherit ? 

He was but dust ; how could he stand before 

him ? 
And, being fall'n, why should he fear to die ? 
Cannot tlie hand that made him first, restore 

him ? 
Deprav'd of sinne, should he deprived lie 
Of grace ? can he not hide infirmitie 

That gave him strength .' unworthy the forsak- 

He is, whoever weighs, without mistaking, 
Or Maker of the man, or manner of his making. 

Who shall thy temple incense any more, 

Or at thy altar crown the sacrifice. 

Or strew with idle flow'rs the hallow'd flore ? 

Or what should prayer deck with herbs and spice 

Her vialls breathing orisons of price ? 

If all must pay that which all cannot pay, 
O first begin with me, and Mercie slay, 
And thy thrice-honoured Sonne that now beneath 
doth stray. 

But if or he, or I, may live and speak. 

And heaven can joy to see a sinner weep, 

O let not Justice' iron sceptre break 

A heart alreadie broke, that low doth creep. 

And with prone humblesse her feet's dust doth 

sweep. 
Must all go by desert ? is nothing free ? 
Ah ! if but those that onely wortliv be. 
None should thee ever see, none should thee ever 

see. 

4_2 



52 GILES FLETCHER. 



What hath man done, that man shall not undo, 
Since God to him is grown so neare akin ? 
Did his foe slay him ? he shall slay his foe : 
Hath he lost all ? he all again shall winne : 
Is sinne his master ? he shall master sinne. 
Too hardy soul, with sinne the field to trie : 
The onely way to conquer was to flie. 
But thus long death hath liv'd, and now death's 
self shall die. 

He is a path, if any be misled ; 

He is a robe, if any naked be : 

If any chance to hunger, he is bread ; 

If any be a bondman, he is ft-ee ; 

If any be but weak, how strong is he I 

To dead men life he is, to sick micn health ; 

To blinde men sight, and to the needie wealth — 
A pleasure without losse, a treasure without stealth. 

AYlio can forget, — never to be forgot — 
The time that all the world in slumber lies, 
When like the starres, the singing angels shot 
To earth, and heaven awaked all his eyes, 
To see another sunne at midnight rise 

On earth ? was never sight of pareil fame ; 

For God before man like himself did frame, 
But God himself now like a mortal man became. 

A childe he was, and had not learnt to speak. 
That with his word the world before did make ; 
His mother's arms him bore, he was so weak, 
That with one hand the vaults of heaven could 

shake. 
See how small room my infant Lord doth take, 

Whom all the world is not enough to hold ! 

Who of his yeares, or of his age, hath told ? 
Never such age so young, never a childe so old. 



A DESCRIPTION OF MERCY. 53 

And yet but newly he was infanted, 
And yet alreatlie lie was souglit to die ; 
Yet scarcely born, alreadie banished ; 
Nor able yet to go, and f'orc't to flie : 
But scarcely lied away, when, by and by, 
The tyrant's sword with bloud is all defird, 
And Kachel, for her sonnes, with t'urie wild, 
Cries, O thou cruell kinj^, and, O my sweetest 
childe. 

Egypt his nurse became, where Nilus springs, 
Who straight to entertain the rising sunne 
The hasty harvest in iiis bosonie brings ; 
But now for drieth' the fields were all undone, 
And now with waters all is overrunne ! 

So fast the Cynthian mountains pour'd their 
snow. 

When once they felt the Sunne so neare them 
glow, 
That Nilus Egypt lost, and to a sea did gi*ow. 

The Angels carol'd loud their song of peace ; 

The cursed oracles were strucken dumbe, 

To see their Shepherd the poore sheplierds pressc ; 

To see their King the kingly sophies come ; 

And them to guide unto his Master's home 
A starre comes dauncing up the Orient, 
That springs for joy over the strawy tent, 

W^here gold, to make their Prince a crown, they 
ail present. 

Young John, glad childe I before he could be born, 

Leapt in the wombe his joy to prophecie ; 

Old Anna, though with age all spent and worn, 

Proclaims her Saviour to posteritie, 

And Simeon fast his dying notes doth plie. 

^ drought. 



54 GILES FLETCHER. 



Oh, liovv the blessed souls about him trace ! 
It is the Sire of heaven thou dost embrace : 
Sing, Simeon, sing — sing, Simeon, sing apace ! 

With that the mighty thunder dropt away 
From God's unvvarie arm, now milder grown, 
And melted into teares ; as if to pray 
For pardon, and for pitie, it had known, 
That should have been for sacred vengeance thrown: 
There too the armies angelique devow'd 
Their former rage, and all to Mercy bow*d : 
Their broken weapons at her feet they gladly 
strovv'd. 

" Bring, bring, ye Graces, all your silver flaskets, 
Painted with every choicest flowre that growes. 
That I may soon unflow'r your fragrant baskets, 
To strow the fields with odours where he goes ; 
Let whatsoere he treads on be a rose." 
So down she let her eyelids fall, to shine 
Upon the rivers of bright Palestine, 
Whose woods drop honey, and her rivers skip with 
wine. 



OUR SAVIOUR'S TEMPTATION. 

Twice had Diana bent her golden bow. 
And shot from heav'n her silver shafts, to rouse 
The sluggish salvages that den below. 
And all the day in lazie covert drouze, 
Since Him the silent wildernesse did house : 
The heav'n his roof and arbour harbour was, 
The ground his bed, and his moist pillow grasse ; 
But fruit there none did grow, nor rivers none did 
passe. 



OUR saviour's temptation. 55 

At length an aged syre farre off he saw 
Come slowly footing; ev'ry step he guest 
One of his feet he from the grave did draw. 
Three legs he had — the wooden was the best; 
And all the way he went he ever blest 

With benedieities, and prayers store ; 

But the bad ground was blessed nere the more ; 
And all his head with snow of age was waxen hore. 

A good old hermit he might seem to be, 
That for devotion had the world forsaken, 
And now was travelling some saint to see. 
Since to his beads he had himself betaken, 
Where all his former sinnes he might awaken, 
And them might wash away vvitli dropping brine, 
And almes, and fasts, and church's discipline ; 
And dead, might rest his bones under the holy 
shrine. 

But when he nearer came he lowted low 
W ith prone obeysance, and with curtsie kind. 
That at his feet his head he seem'd to throw ; — 
What needs him now another saint to finde ? 
Affections are the sails, and faith the winde. 
That to this saint a thousand souls convay 
Each houre : O happy pilgrims, thither stray ! 
What caren they for beasts, or for the wearie way ? 

Soon the old palmer his devotions sung. 
Like pleasing anthems moduled in time ; 
For well that aged syre could tip his tongue 
With golden foyl of eloquence, and lime. 
And lick his rugged speech with phrases prime. 

" Ay me !" (quoth he,) "how many yeares have 
been 

Since these old eyes the sunne of heav*n have 
seen ! 
Certes the Sonne of heav'n they now behold, I ween. 



^6 GILES FLETCHER. 



" Ah, mote my humble cell so blessed be 
As Heav'n to welcome in his lowly roof, 
And be the temple for thy Deitie ! 
Lo, how my cottage worships thee aloof, 
That underground hath hid his head, in proof 

It doth adore thee with the seeling low, 

Here honey, milke, and chesnuts wilde do 
grow, 
The boughs a bed of leaves upon thee shall bestow. 

u Sr^' ^^^ ' ", ^^^^ ^^^^^' ^"^ therewith sigh't full deep,) 
"The heav'ns, alas! too envious are" grown. 
Because our fields thy presence from them keep ; 
For stones do grow where corn was lately sown : '' 
(So stoopmg down, he gather'd up a stone :) 
" But thou with corn canst make this stone to 

eare, — 
What needen we the angry heav ns to feare ? 
Let them us envie still, so we enjoy thee here." 
Thus on they wand'red : but those holy weeds 
A monstrous serpent, and no man, did cover : 
So under greenest herbs the adder feeds ; 
And round about that stinking corpse did hover 
The dismal prince of gloomie night, and over 
His ever-damned head the shadows err'd 
Of thousand peccant ghosts, unseen, unheard. 
And all the tyrant fears, and all the tyrant fear'd. 
He was the sonne of blackest Acheron, 
Where many frozen souls do chat'ring lie. 
And ruFd the burning waves of Phlegethon, 
Where many more in flaming sulphur frie, 
At once compell'd to live and forc't to die ; 
Where nothing can be heard for the loud crie 
Of" Oh!" and "Ah !" and, "Out, alas ! that I 
Or once agam might live, or once at length mio-ht 
die!" ^ ° 



OUR SAVIOUR^S TEMPTATION. 57 

Ere long tliey came neare to a baleful bovvre, 
Much like the mouth of that infernall cave 
That gaping stood all comers to devoure, 
Dark, dolefull, dreary — like a greedy grave, 
That still for carrion carcases doth crave : 

The ground no herbs but venomous did beare, 
Nor ragged trees did leave, but ev'ry where 
Dead bones and skulls were cast, and bodies hang- 
ed were. 

Upon the roof the bird of sorrow sat, 
Elonging joyfull day with her sad note, 
And through the shady aire the flutt'ring bat 
Did wave her leather sails, and blindely flote, 
While with her wings the fatal shreech-owl 
smote 
Th* unblessed house ; there, on a craggy stone, 
Celleno hung, and made his direful! mone. 
And all about the murder'd ghosts did shreek and 
grone. 

Like cloudie moonshine in some shadowie grove. 
Such was the light in which Despair did dwell ; 
But he himself with night for darknesse strove. 
His black uncombed locks dishevell'd fell 
About his face, through which, as brands of hell, 
Sunk in his skull, his staring eyes did glow, 
That made him deadly look ; their glimpse did 
show 
Like cockatrice's eyes, that sparks of poyson throw. 

His cloaths were ragged clouts, with thorns pin'd 

fast ; 
And, as he musing lay, to stonie fright 
A thousand wild chimaeras would him cast : 
As when a fearfull dream in midst of night 
Skips to the brain, and phancies to the sight 



58 GILES FLETCHER. 



Some winged furie, straight the hasty foot, 
Eager to flie, cannot pluck up his root ; 
Tlie voice dies in the tongue, and mouth gapes 
without boot^ 

Now he would dream that he from heaven fell, 
And then would snatch the aire, afraid to fall ; 
And now he thought he sinking was to hell, 
And then would grasp the earth ; and now Ins stall 
Him seemed hell, and then he out would crawl ; 
And ever, as he crept, would squint aside, 
Lest him, perhaps, some furie had espide, 
And then, alas ! he should in chains for ever bide. 

Therefore he softly shrunk, and stole away, 
Ne ever durst to draw his breath for fear. 
Till to the doore he came, and there he lay 
Panting for breath, as though he dying were ; 
And still he thought he felt their craples^ teare 
Him by the heels back to his ugly denne : 
Out fain he would have leapt abroad, but then 
The heav'n, as hell, he fear'd, that punish guilty men. 

Within the gloomie hole of this pale wight 
The serpent woo'd him with his charms to inne, 
There he might bait the day, and rest the night ; 
But under that same bait a fearfuU grin 
Was ready to entangle him in sinne. 
But he upon ambrosia daily fed. 
That grew in Eden — thus he answered : 
So both away were caught, and to the temple fled. 

Well knew our Saviour this the Serpent was, 
And the old Serpent knew our Saviour well ; 
Never did any this in falsehood passe, 
Never did any him in truth excell : 

^ To no purpose. ' grapples. 



OUR saviour''s temptation. 59 

With liim we fly to heav'n, from lieav'n we fell 
With liim : but now they both together met 
Upon the sacred pinacles, that threat, 

With their aspiring tops, Astruea's starrie seat. 

Here did Presumption her pavilion spread 
Over tlie temple, the bright starres among, 
(Ah ! that her feet should trample on the head 
Of that most rev'rend place!) and a lewd throng 
Of vi'anton boyes sung her a pleasant song 

Of love, long life, of mercy, and of grace ; 

And evVy one her dearely did embrace. 
And she herself enamour'd was of her own face — 

A painted face, belied with vermeyl store, 
Which light Euelpis ev'ry day did trimme. 
That in one hand a guilded anchor wore. 
Not fixed on the rock, but on the brimme, 
Of the wide aire, she let it loosely swimme : 

Her other hand a sprinkle carried. 

And ever when her lady wavered. 
Court holy- water all upon her sprinkeled. 

Poore fool ! she thought herself in wondrous price 
With God, as if in paradise she were ; 
But, were she not in a fooFs paradise, 
She might have seen more reason to despair : 
But him, she, like some ghastly fiend, did fear ; 
And therefore, as that wretch hew'd out his cell 
Under the bowels, in the heart of hell. 
So she above the moon, amid the starres would 
dwell. 

Her tent with sunny clouds was seel'd aloft, 
And so exceeding shone with a false light. 
That heav'n itself to her it seemed oft — 
Heav'n without clouds to her deluded sight ; 



60 GILES FLETCHER. 



But clouds withouten heav'n it was aright ; 
And as her house was built, so did her brain 
Build castles in the aire, with idle pain ; 

But heart she never had in all her body vain. 

Like as a ship in which no ballance lies, 
Without a pilot, on the sleeping waves. 
Fairly along with winde and water flies, 
And painted masts with silken sails embraves', 
That Neptune's self the bragging vessel saves, 

To laugh awhile at her so proud aray ; 

Her waving streamers loosely she lets play, 
And flagging colours shine as bright as smiling day. 

But all so soon as Heav'n his brows doth bend, 
She veils her banners, and pulls in her beams, 
The empty bark the raging billows send 
Up to th' Olympique waves, and Argus seems 
Again to rida upon our lower streams : 

Right so Presumption did herself behave, 
Tossed about with ev'ry stormie wave, 
And in white lawn she went, most like an angel 
brave. 

Gently our Saviour she began to shrive^, 
Whether he were the Sonne of God, or no ; 
For any other she disdain'd to wive : 
And if he were, she bid him fearlesse throw 
Himself to ground ; and therewithall did show 
A flight of little angels, that did wait. 
Upon their glittering wings to latch him straight. 
And longed on their backs to feel his glorious 
weight. 

But when she saw her speech prevailed naught. 
Herself she tombled headlong to the flore : 

' adorns. ^ To question as a confesssor. 



OUR SAVIOUR^S TEMPTATION. 61 

But him the angels on their feathers caught, 
And to an airie mountain nimbly bore, 
Whose snowie shoulders Hke some chaulkie shore, 
Restlesse Olympus seem'd to rest upon, 
With all his swimming globes : so both are gone, 
The dragon with the Lambe — Ah ! unmeet para- 
gon ! 

All suddenly the hill his snow devoures, 

In liew whereof a goodly garden grew ; 

As if the snow had melted into flowers. 

Which their sweet breath in subtill vapours threw. 

That all about perfumed spirits flew : 

For whatsoe'er might aggravate the sense. 
In all the world, or please the appetence, 
Here it was poured out in lavish affluence. 

Not lovely Ida might with this compare. 
Though many streams his banks besilvered. 
Though Xanthus with his golden sands he bare ; 
Nor Hybla, though his thyme, depastured, 
As fast again with honey blossomed ; 
Ne Rhodope, ne Tempe's flowrie plain : 
Adonis* garden was to this but vain. 
Though Plato on his beds a floud of praise did rain. 

For in all these some one thing most did grow, 
But in this one grew all things else beside; 
For sweet varietie herself did throw 
To ev'ry bank : here all the ground she dide 
In lihe white ; there pinks eblazed wide. 

And damaskt all the earth ; and here she shed 
Blew violets, and there came roses red ; 
And ev'ry sight the yeelding sense as captive led. 

The garden like a lilie fair was cut. 
That lay as if she slumber'd in delight. 



62 GILES FLETCHER, 



And to the open skies her eyes did shut ; 

The azure fields of heav'n were sembled right 

In a large round, set with the tlow'rs of light : 
The flow'rs-de-luce, and the round sparks of dew, 
That hung upon their azure leaves, did shew 

Like twinkling starres, that sparkle in the evening 
blew. 

Upon a hillie bank her head she cast. 
On which the bowre of Vain-delight was built ; 
White and red roses for her face were plac't, 
And for her tresses marigolds were spilt : 
Them broadly she displaed, like flaming gilt, 

Till in the ocean the glad day were drown'd ; 

Then up again her yellow locks she wound. 
And with green fillets in their prettie calls ' them 
bound. 

What should I here depaint her lilie hand, 
Her veins of violets, her ermine breast. 
Which there in orient colours living stand ; 
Or how her gown with silken leaves is dress'd ; 
Or how her watchman, arm'd with boughie crest, 
A wall of prim hid in his bushes bears. 
Shaking at every winde their leavie speares. 
While she supinely sleeps, ne to be waked fears ? 

Over the hedge depends the graping elm. 
Whose greener head, empurpuled in wine. 
Seemed to wonder at his bloudy helm, 
And half suspect the bunches of the vine, 
Lest they, perhaps, his wit should undermine. 
For well he knew such fruit he never bore : 
But her weak arms embraced him the more. 
And with her ruby grapes laught at her paramour. 

' calls : cauls. 



OUR saviour's temptation. 63 

Under the shadow of those drunken elms 
A fountain rose * * * * 

• •«»*• 

The font of silver was, and so his showres 
In silver fell, onely the gilded bowls 
(Like to a fornace that the minrall powres 
Seem'd to have moulten in their shining holes; 
And on the water, like to burning coles) 
On liquid silver leaves of roses lay : 
But when Panglory here did list to play. 
Rose-water then it ranne, and milk it rain d, they 
say. 

The roof thick clouds did paint, from which three 

boyes 
Three gaping mermaids with their eawrs did feed. 
Whose breasts let fall the stream, with sleepy 

noise. 
To lions' mouths, from whence it leap'd with speed. 
And in the rosie laver seem'd to bleed. 
The naked boyes unto the waters fall, 
Their stonie nightingales had taught to call, 
When zephyr breath'd into their watry interall. 

And all about, embayed in soft sleep, 
A herd of charmed beasts aground were spread. 
Which the fair witch in golden chains did keep, 
And them in willing bondage fettered ; 
Once men they liv'd, but now the men were dead. 
And turn'd to beasts, — so fabled Homer old. 
That Circe, with her potion, charm'd in gold, 
Us'd manly souls in beastly bodies to immould. 

Through this false Eden, to his Leman's bowre, 
(Whom thousand souls devoutly idolize) 
Our first Destroyer led our Saviour : 
There in the lower room, in solemne wise, 



64 GILES FLETCHER. 



They danc't around, and pour'd their sacrifice 
To plump Lyseus, and, among the rest. 
The jolly priest in ivie garlands drest, 

Chaunted wild orgials, in honour of the feast. 

Flie, flie, thou holy Childe, that wanton room, 
And thou, my chaster Muse, those harlots shun, 
And with him to a higher storie come, 
Where mounts of gold, and flouds of silver runne, 
The while the owners, with their wealth undone. 
Starve in their store, and in their plenty pine, 
Tumbling themselves upon their heaps of mine^ 
Glutting their famisht souls with the deceitfuU 
shine. 

Ah 1 who was he such precious perils found ? 
How strongly Nature did her treasures hide. 
And throw upon them mountains of thick ground, 
To dark their orie lustre ! but queint Pride 
Hath taught her sonnes to wound their mother's 
side, 
And guage the depths to search for flaring shells. 
In whose bright bosome spumie Bacchus swells. 
That neither heav'n nor earth henceforth in safetie 

dwells. 
O sacred hunger of the greedie eye. 
Whose need hath end, but no end covetise ; 
Emptie in fulnesse, rich in povertie. 
That, having all things, nothing can suffice, 
How thou befanciest the men most wise ; 

The poore man would be rich, the rich man 

great. 
The great man king, the king, in God's own 
seat 
Enthron'd, with mortal arm dares flames and thun- 
der threat. 



OUR saviour''s temptation. 65 

Therefore above the rest Ambition sate, 
His court with glitterant pearl was all enwallM, 
And round about the wall, in chairs of state, 
And most majestique splendour were enstall'd 
A hundred kings, whose temples were impalled 
In golden diadems, set here and there 
With diamonds, and gemmed everywhere ; 
And of their golden virges none disceptred were. 

High over all Panglories' blazing throne. 
In her bright turret, all of crystall wrought. 
Like Phoebus' lamp, in midst of heaven, shone : 
Whose starry top, with pride infernall fraught, 
Self-arching columnes to uphold were taught. 
In which her image still reflected was 
By the smooth crystall, that most like her glasse, 
In beauty and in frailtie did all others passe. 

A silver wand the sorceresse did sway. 
And, for a crown of gold, her hair she wore ; 
Onely a garland of rose-buds did play 
About her locks, and in her hand she bore 
A hollow globe of glasse, that long before 
She full of emptiness had bladdered, 
And all the world therein depictured, 
Whose colours, like the rainbow, ever vanished. 

Such watry orbicles young boyes do blow 
Out from their sopy shells, and much admire 
The swimming world, which tenderly they row 
With easie breath till it be waved higher : 
But if they chance but roughly once aspire. 

The painted bubble instantly doth fall. 

Here when he came, she 'gan for music call. 
And sung this wooing song, to welcome him with- 
all:— 

" Love is the blossome where there blows 
Every tiling that lives or grows : 

[jAMES I. POI-TS.] 5 



66 GILES FLETCHER. 

Love doth make the heav'ns to move, 
And the sunne doth burn in love : 
Love the strong and weak doth yoke. 
And makes the yvie dimbe the oke ; 
Under whose shadows lions wilde, 
Soften'd by love, grow tame and milde. 
Love no med'cine can appease, 
He t^urns the fishes in the seas ; 
Not all the skill his wounds can stench, 
Not all the sea his fire can quench : 
Love did make the bloudy spear 
Once a leavie coat to wear. 
While in his leaves there shrouded lay 
Sweet birds, for love, that sing and play 
And of all love's joyfull flame 
I the bud and blossome am. 
Only bend thy knee to me. 
Thy wooing shall thy winning be. 

*' See, see the flowers that, below, 

Now as fresh as morning blow ; 

And of all, the virgin rose, 

That as bright Aurora shows : 

How they all unleaved die, 

Losing their virginitie : 

Like unto a summer shade, 

But now born, and now they fade. 

Every thing doth passe away. 

There is danger in delay; 

Come, come, gather then the rose. 

Gather it, or it you lose. 

All the lands of Tagus' shore 

Into my bosome casts his ore : 

All the valleys' swimming corn, 

To my house is yearly born : 

Every grape of every vine 

Is gladly bruis'd to make me wine; 



OUR saviour''s temptation. 67 

While ten thousand kings, as proud 
To carry up my train, have bow'd, 
And a world of ladies send me, 
In my chambers to attend me : 
All the starres in heav'n that shine. 
And ten thousand more, are mine. 
Only' bend thy knee to me, 
Thy wooing shall thy winning be." 

Thus sought the dire enchauntresse in his minde 
Her guilefuU bait to have embosomed ; 
But he her charms dispersed into winde, 
And her of insolence admonished. 
And all her optique glasses shattered. 

So with her syre to hell she took her flight, 
(The starting aire flew from the damned spright,) 
Where deeply both aggriev'd, plunged themselves 
in night. 

But to their Lord, now musing in his thought, 
A heav'nly vollie of light angels flew, 
And from his Father him a banquet brought 
Through the fine element ; for well they knew, 
After his Lenten fast, he hungry grew ; 
And, as he fed, the holy quires combine 
To sing a hymne of the celestiall Trine ; 
All thought to passe, and each was past all thought 
divine. 

The birds' sweet notes, to sonnet out their joyes, 
Attemper'd to the layes angelicall ; 
And to the birds the windes attune their noise ; 
And to the windes the waters hoarcely call. 
And Eccho back again revoiced all ; 

That the whole valley rung with victorie. 

But now our Lord to rest doth homeward flie : 
See how the night comes stealing from the moun- 
tains high ! 

___ 



68 



GILES FLETCHER. 



THE TRAITOR JUDAS. 

The graceless Traitour round about did look 
(He lookt not long, the devil quickly met him) 
To finde a halter, which he found, and took, 
Onely a gibbet now he needs must get him ; 
So on a wither'd tree he fairly set him, 

And helpt him fit the rope, and in his thought 
A thousand furies, with their whips, he brought; 
So there he stands, readie to hell to make his vault. 

For him a waking bloudhound, yelling loud, 
That in his bosome long had sleeping laid ; 
A guiltie conscience, barking after bloud, 
Pursued eagerly, ne ever staid, 
Till the betrayer's self it had betray'd. 

Oft changed he place, in hope away to winde, 
But change of place could never change his 
minde : 
Himself he flies to lose, and follows for to finde. 

There is but two wayes for this soul to have, 
When parting from the body, forth it purges ; 
To flie to heav'n, or fall into the grave. 
Where whips of scorpions, with the stinging 

scourges. 
Feed on the howling ghosts, and fierie surges 
Of brimstone rowl about the cave of night. 
Where flames do burn, and yet no spark of light; 
And fire both fries and freezes the blaspheming 
spright. 

There lies the captive soul, aye-sighing sore, 
Reck'ning a thousand yeares since her first bands; 
Yet stayes not there, but addes a thousand more, 
And at another thousand never stands. 
But tells to them the starres and heaps the sands : 



THE TRAITOR JUDAS. 69 

And now the starres are told, and sands arerunne, 
And all those thousand thousand myriads done, 
And yet, but now, alas ! but now all is begunne. 

With that a flaming brand a furie catch'd. 
And shook, and tost it round in his wilde thought. 
So from his heart all joy, all comfort snatcht, 
With ev'ry starre of hope ; and as he sought 
(With present fear and future grief distraught) 
To flie from his own heart, and aid implore 
Of him, the more he gives, that hath the more, 
Whose storehouse is the heav'ns, too little for his 
store : 

" Stay, wretch, on earth*' (cried Satan) — " restlesse 

rest ; 
Know'st thou not Justice lives in heav'n ; or can 
The worst of creatures live among the best — 
Among the blessed angels cursed man? 
Will Judas now become a Christian? 

Whither will hope's long wings transport thy 

minde ? 
Or canst thou not thyself a sinner finde ? 
Or, cruell to thyself, wouldst thou have mercie 

kinde? 

" He gave thee life; why shouldst thou seek to slay 
He lent thee wealth to feed thy avarice : Qiim ? 
He call'd thee friend — what, that thou shouldst 

betray him ? 
He kist thee, though he knew his hfe the price: 
He waslit thy feet — shouldst thou his sacrifice ? 
He gave thee bread, and wine, his bodie, bloud, 
And at thy heart to enter in he stood ; 
But then I entred in, and all my snakie brood." 

As when wilde Pentheus, grown mad with fear. 
Whole troups of hellish hags about him spies. 



70 GILES FLETCHER. 



Two bloody sunnes stalking the duskie sphear. 

And twofold Thebes runs rowling in his eyes ; 

Or through the scene staring Orestes flies. 

With eyes flung back upon his mother's ghost, 
That, with infernall serpents all embost, 

And torches quencht in blood, doth her stern 
Sonne accost; 

Such horrid gorgons, and misformed forms 
Of damned fiends, flew dancing in his heart, 
That, now unable to endure their storms, 
" Flie, flie !" he cries, " thyself whatere thou art. 
Hell, hell, alreadie burns in ev'ry part." 
So down into his torturers' arms he fell, 
That readie stood his funeralls to yell. 
And in a cloud of night to waft him quick to hell. 

Yet oft he snatcht, and started as he hung : 
So when the senses half enslumbered lie, 
The headlong bodie, readie to be flung 
By the deluding phansie from some high 
And craggie rock, recovers greedily, 

And clasps the yeelding pillow, half asleep. 
And, as from heav'n it tombled to the deep, 
Feels a cold sweat through ev'ry trembling mem- 
ber creep : 

There let him hang embowelled in bloud, 
Where never any gentle shepheard feed 
His blessed flocks, nor ever heav'nly floud 
Fall on the cursed ground, nor wholesome seed, 
That may the least delight or pleasure breed ; 
Let never Spring visit his habitation, 
But nettles, kix, and all the weedy nation, 
With emptie elders grow — sad signes of desolation ! 

There let the dragon keep his habitance, 
And stinking carcasses be thrown avaunt, 



THE TRAITOR JUDAS. 71 

Fauns, sylvans, and deformed satyrs dance, 
Wild cats, wolves, toads, and screech-owls direly 

chaiint ; 
There ever let some restlesse spirit haunt, 

With hollow sound, and clashing chains, to 

scare 
The passenger, and eyes like to the starre 
That sparkles in the crest of angrie Mars afarre. 



THE JOYS OF THE REDEEMED. 

Here may the band that now in triumph shines, 
And that (before they were invested thus) 
In earthly bodies carried heavenly mindes, 
Pitcht round about, in order glorious, 
Their sunny tents and houses luminous. 
All their eternall day in songs employing, 
Joying their end, without end of their joying, 
While their Almighty Prince Destruction is de- 
stroying. 

Full, yet without satietie, of that 
Which whets and quiets greedy appetite. 
Where never sunne did rise, nor ever sat ; 
But one eternall day and endlesse light 
Gives time to those whose time is infinite — 
Speaking with thought, obtaining without fee, 
Beholding him whom never eye could see, 
And magnifying him that cannot greater be. 

How can such joy as this want words to speak ? 
And yet what words can speak such joy as this ? 
Farre from the world, that might their quiet break, 
Here the glad souls the face of bqautie kisse, 
Pour'd out in pleasure, on their beds of blisse ; 



72 GILES FLETCHER. 

And drunk with nectar torrents, ever hold 
Their eyes on him, whose graces manifoiil 
The more they do behold, the more they would 
behold. 

Their sight drinks lovely fires in at their eyes, 
Their brain sweet incense with fine breath accloyes, 
That on God's sweating altar burning lies ; 
Their hungrie eares feed on their heav'nly noise, 
That Angels sing, to tell their untold ioyes ; 
Their understanding naked truth, their wills 
The all and self-sufficient goodnesse fills, 
That nothing here is wanting but the want of ills. 

No sorrow now hangs clouding on their brow, 
No bloudles maladie empales their face. 
No age drops on their hairs his silver snow. 
No nakednesse their bodies doth embase, 
No poverty themselves and theirs disgrace. 
No fear of death the joy of hfe deuours, 
No vnchaste sleep their precious time deflowres ; 
No losse, no grief, no change wait on their winged 
hours. 

But now their naked bodies scorn the cold. 
And from their eyes joy looks, and laughs at pain ; 
The infant wonders how he came so old, 
And old man how he came so young again ; 
Still resting, though from sleep they still refrain : 
Where all are rich, and yet no gold they ow, 
And all are kings, and yet no subjects know, 
All full, and yet no time on food they do bestow. 

For things that passe are past, and in this field 
The indeficient spring no winter fears ; 
The trees together fruit and blossome yield, 
The unfading lily leaves of silver beares ; 
And crimson rose a scarlet garland weares : 



THE JOYS OF THE REDEEMED. 73 

And all of these on the saints' bodies grow, 
Not, as they wont, on baser earth below : 
Three rivers here, of milk, and wine, and honey, flow. 

About the holy citie rowles a flood 

Of moiilten crystall like a sea of glasse, 

On which weak stream a strong foundation stood : 

Of living diamonds the building was, 

That all things els, besides itself, did passe, 

Her streets, instead of stones, the starres did 
pave. 

And little pearles for dust it seem'd to have, 
On which soft streaming manna, like pure snow, 
did wave. 

In midst of this citie celestiall, 

Where the eternal temple should have rose, 

Liohtned th' Idea Beatificall — 

End and beginning of each thing that grows ; 

Whose self no end nor yet beginning knows, 
That hath no eyes to see, nor eares to heare. 
Yet sees and heares, and is all eye, all eare ; 

That nowhere is contain'd, and yet is everywhere : 

Changer of all things, yet immutable ; 

Before and after all, the first and last; 

That, moving all, is yet immoveable ; 

Great without quantitie, in whose forecast 

Things past are present, things to come are past ; 
Swift without motion, to whose open eye 
The hearts of wicked men unbrested lie ; 

At once absent and present to them, farre and nigh. 

It is no flaming lustre, made of lights- 
No sweet consent, or well-tim'd harmonie ; 
Ambrosia for to feast the appetite. 
Or flowerie odour, mix'd with spicerie, 
No soft embrace, or pleasure bodily ; 



74 GILES FLETCHER. 



And yet it is a kinde of inward feast, 
A harmony that sounds within the breast, 
An odour, light, embrace, in which the soul doth 
rest. 

A heav'nly feast, no hunger can consume ; 

A light unseen, yet shines in every place ; 

A sound no time can steal ; a sweet perfume 

No windes can scatter ; an in tire embrace 

That no satietie can ere unlace : 

Ingrac't into so high a favour, there 
The saints with their beawpeers whole worlds 
outweare, 

And things unseen do see, and things unheard do 
heare. 

Ye blessed souls, grown richer by your spoil, 
Whose losse though great, is cause of greater 

gains. 
Here may your weary spirits rest from toil, 
Spending your endlesse ev'ning that remains 
Among those white flocks and celestiall trains. 
That feed upon their Shepheard's eyes, and frame 
That heavenly musick of so wondrous fame, 
Psalming aloud the holy honours of his name ! 

Had I a voice of steel to tune my song. 
Were every verse as smoothly fil'd as glasse, 
And every member turned to a tongue, 
And every tongue were made of sounding brasse ; 
Yet all that skill, and all this strength, alas I 
Should it presume to gild, were misadvis'd 
The place, where David hath new songs devis'd 
As in his burning throne he sits emparadis'd. 

Most happie Prince, whose eyes those starres 

behold, 
Treading ours under feet ! now maist thou poure 



THE JOYS OF THE REDEEMED. 75 

That overflowing skill, wherewith of old 

Thou wont'st to combe rough speech ; now maist 

thou showre 
Fresh streams of praise vpon that holy bowre, 
Which well we heaven call : not that it rowls, 
But that it is the haven of our souls — 
Most happie Prince, whose sight so heavenly sight 
beholds 1 

Ah, foolish shepheards, that were wont to esteem 
Your God all rough and shaggy-hair'd to be! 
And yet farre wiser shepheards then ye seem ; 
For who so poore (though who so rich) as he 
When, with us hermiting in low degree, 

He wash't his flocks in Jordan's spotlesse tide, 
And, that his deare remembrance aye might bide, 
Did to us come, and with us liv'd, and for us died ? 

But now so lively colours did embeam 
His sparkling forehead, and so shiny rayes 
Kindled his flaming locks, that down did stream 
In curies along his neck, where sweetly playes 
(Singing his wounds of love in sacred layes) 
His dearest Spouse ^ spouse of the dearest Lover, 
Knitting a thousand knots over and over, 
And dying still for love ; but they her still recover. 

Fair Egliset, that at his eyes doth dresse 
Her glorious face, those eyes from whence are shed 
Infinite belamours ; where, to expresse 
His love, high God all heav'n as captive leads. 
And all the banners of his grace dispreads. 
And in those windows doth his arms en glaze, 
And on those eves the aufrels all do eraze. 
And from those eyes the lights of heav'n do glean 
their blaze. 



^ Spouse: the Church. 



VIII. 
HENRY AINSWORTH. 



PSALM XXIII. 

Jehovah feedeth me, I shall not lack ; 

In grassy folds he down doth make me lye, 

He gently leads me quiet waters by, 

He doth return my soul : for his name sake 

In paths of justice leads me quietly. 

Yea, though I walk in dale of deadly shade. 

He fear none ill, for with me thou wilt be ; 

Thy rod, thy staff, eke they shall comfort me : 

Fore me a table thou hast ready made, 

In their presence that my distressers be : 

Thou makest fat mine head with ointing oil; 

My cup abounds. Doubtless good and mercy 

Shall all the days of my life follow me : 

Also within Jehovah's house I shall 

To length of dayes repose me quietly. 

PSALM CVII. 

CONFESSB ye to Jehovah thankfully. 

For he is good : for ever his mercy, 

Let the redeemed of .lehovah say. 

Whom he from foes' hand hath redeem'd away. 

And gather them out of the lands did hee, 

From east to west, to north, and fro the sea. 

They in the wildernes in desert way 
Wandred; no dwelling city find did they; 
Hungry and thirsty eke : that them within 
Their soul hath faynting overwhelmed bin, 



PSALM CVII. 77 



And to tlie Lord tliey cryde in their distrease : 
He freely rid them from their anguishes. 

And in a right way he did make them goe, 
A dwelling citie for to come unto ; 
Confesse they to Jehovah his mercy, 
His marvels eke to sonns of man earthly; 
For he the thirsty soul hath satiated, 
And hungry soul with good replenished. 

They that in darkness and death's shadow bide, 
In yron and affliction fast tyde, 
Because against God's words they did rebell, 
And did despise the Highest one's counsell : 
Then humbled he their heart with toilsom grief; 
They stumbled down, and none did yield releif. 

And they the Lord in their distresse besought, 
He sav'dthem from their sorrowes, He them brought 
From darknes and death's shade, and broke their 

bands. 
Let them confesse Jehovah's mercy, and 
His marvels to men's sonns. For dores of brass 
He broke, and hewd asunder yron barrs. 

Fools, for the way of their transgression, 
And for their vices, have affliction ; 
Al meat their soul abhorreth lothsomly. 
And to the gates of death ap{)roch they nye. 
When to the Lord they crye in their distresse, 
He saveth them out of their anguishes. 

He sendeth forth his word and them healeth : 

From their corruptions delivereth. 

Confess they to Jehovah his mercy, 

His marvels eke to sonns of man earthly ; 

And offer offrings of confession ; 

And let them tell his works with showting song. 



78 HENRY AINSWORTH. 



THE SECOND PART. 

They that in ships unto the sea down goe, 

That in the many waters labour doe, 

They see Jehovah's operations, 

And in the deep his wondrous actions. 

For he sayth, and doth rayse the wind stormy, 

And it doth Hft the waves thereof on high. 

They mount to heav'ns, down to the deeps they 

goe; 
Their soul it melts away in evil woe: 
They reel and stagger like a drunken wight, 
And all their wisdom is upswallowed quight : 
And to the Lord they cry in their distresse, 
And he outbrings them from their anguishes. 

The storm he to a silent calm doth set, 

And then their waves alayed are quiet ; 

And they rejoyce because they are made still, 

And he them leads to haven of their will. 

Confess they to Jehovah his mercy, 

His marvels eke to sonns of man earthly. 

And in the people's church exalt they him. 

And in the elder's sitting prayse they him: 

He turns the rivers to a wildernes. 

And springs of water to a thirstines ; 

A land of fruit to salttnes barren, 

For wickednes of them that dwell therein. 

He turns the desert to a waters' pool, 
And land of drought to waters of plentifull. 
And there he seateth them that hungry are : 
And they a dwelling city doe prepare. 
They vinyards also plant, and sow the fields. 
Which fruit of usual revenue yields. 



PSALM CVII. 79 



And he them blesseth, and they are increast 
Greatly, and he minisheth not their beast. 
Agayn they are diminislit and brought low, 
By close restreint, by evil and sorrow : 
He povvrs contempt on bountiful princes, 
And makes them err in waylesse vvildernes. 

And poor from povertie he makes up rise, 
And putteth as a flock his families. 
See shall the righteous, and joyful bee. 
And stop her mouth shall all iniquitie. 
Who wise is, and will these things heedful leani, 
And they Jehovah's mercies shall discern. 

PSALM CXXXVII. 

By Babel's rivers there sate wee, 
Yea wept, when wee did mind Sion; 
The willowes that amidds it bee 
Our harps we hanged them upon : 
For songs of us there ask did they 
That had us captive led along ; 
And mirth they that us heaps did lay. 
Sing unto us some Sion's song. 

Jehovah's song how sing shall wee 
Within a forreyn people's land ? 
Jerusalem, if I doe thee 
P^orget, forget let my right hand. 
Cleave let my tongue to my palat, 
If I do not in mind thee bear ; 
If I Jerusalem doe not 
Above my cheifest joy prefer. 

Remember, Lord, to iEdom's sonns 
Day of Jerusalem, who sayd. 
Rase, rase to her foundations ! 
Daughter of Babel, wastful layd. 



80 HENRY AINSWORTH. 

O blessed he that thy reward 
Payes thee, which thou reward est us ! 
O blessed he that takes, and hard 
Against the rock thy babes doth crush ! 



IX. 
SIR EDWIN SANDYS. 



PSALM CXXAail. 

O BLESSED they whose humble harts 
True fear of power divine endues : 
Religous soule, that ne'er departs 
From way which blisful life renues. 
O blessed man ! thy ioys abound : 
Thyn house thy cheerful hands shall rear 
And labours iust, with blessing cround. 
Shall feeding fruit still plenteous fear. 
Thy wife, a vine on wall disspred, 
In fruitful love hast ioious met, 
Thy children sweet, in virtue bred. 
Fair olive-plants, thy boord beset. 

So thus God's fear thus graced shall be ; 
From Sion deer thee God shall bless. 
And quiet home shall plentie see. 
And life contented long possess. 
That all thy days delighted ey 
Jerusalem's great weal may vieu, 
And wasting life itself espy 
In children's children to renue. 
O thankful then God's love alure, 
Stil righteous life with care maintain, 
So happie long maist thou endure, 
So peace to Israel long remain. 



X. 

ARTHUR WARREN. 



SELFISHNESS OF THE WORLD. 

This moov'd the prudent hermits to forsake 
Country, acquaintance, parents, livings, land. 
And in the wilderness a cell to make, 
Where they, secur d from injuries, might stand ; 
Though mosse, not downe, they us'd instead of bed, 
And were with hips and hawes for dainties fed. 

It's ease enough, whereas may lodge Content ; 
It's cheere enough, where Nature is suffis'd; 
It's right enough, whereas no wrong is meant ; 
It's love enough, where no hate is devis'd: 
Better to live alone in peace and rest, 
Than 'mongst the multitude and be opprest. 

Some unfrequented woods I seeke to find. 
Some unknowne desarts journey I to see. 
What Solitarines hath there assign'de 
For such as her inhabitants shall be ; 
The earth I survey for the secret'st field, 
To prove what entertainment it may yield. 

The lynx, that is the clearest beast of sight, 
Seemeth to shed a showre of christall teares ; 
Tlie lyon, monarch for his matchlesse might, 
Offers no force to load my life with feares ; 
Tygres are tame, bulls hurt me not with home ; 
Woolves are like lambs, by them I am not tome. 

My misadventures doe them all amaze, 
Of mine afflictions they remaine in awe ; 

[jAMES I. POETS.] 6 



82 ARTHUR WARREN. 

On my mishaps and my misfortunes gaze, 
As though they so strange objects never saw : 
So forlorne like I passe, so vile, so base, 
That they relent to view my ruthfull case. 

Thus I with eyes of farre discerning mind 
Homeward convert a distort countenance, 
In esperance acquaintance some to find, 
Which might eye-witnes, unexpected chance, 
Earth's cormorant ! heere, to thy scandall, see 
The mercy which the mercilesse shew me. 

Thou wilt not alter, but from have to hold. 
From catch to keepe, from much to gather more. 
From cottages to farmes, from lead to gold, 
From competence into superfluous store: 
Thy nature nought to such but envie yields. 
As have a meadow greener than thy fields. 

Might I heire to some usurer be found, 
Whose gorged chests surfet with cramming gold ; 
Whose coffers with commodities abound, 
So full that they no sterling more may hold ; 
Rome, rascals, then, make space and grace for me. 
Whereas my worship shall in person be. 

I would elect, flaunt, cut and swash for mates. 
For choice companions, pleasure, mirth, delight, 
For equals, gentles, honourables, states : 
Ajax would not presume to proove my might, 
Mylo would beare his bull, and let me goe, 
Malitious Momus durst not be my foe ; 

Dignitie seem inferiour, and too bad 

To be my shadowe ; Science would attend. 

Invention practize arts to make me glad, 

Poetry my profession would commend, 

DutifuU loyalty would humbly greete 

My person, passing through the prospicuous streete. 



SELFISHNESS OF THE WORLD. 83 

But now, the worst are censured too good, 
The miscreants, the abjects, the forlorne. 
Adjudging baseness, borne of better blood, 
A corner of my company doe scorn : 
So odible an object am I thought. 
Contemned, forsaken, loath'd, and set at nought. 

Yet, miser ! thus disparaged, I live ; 

Succour and meanes of maintenance to mee 

The heate, the ayre, the woods and waters give, 

Though fortunatelings hate it so to bee : 

I borrow not, — doubting to be denide ; 

I steale not, — fearing my life should be tride. 

Come, staff ! and manage mine unhappy hand ; 
Scrip ! guard my shoulders, burthen light to bare : 
Three merry mates we 'gainst the sun will stand. 
Solace to see, that comforts none can heare : 
The lighter purse, the .lesse the cares are found ; 
Hearke I while I whistle to the winds around. 



THE PATIENCE OF POVERTY. 

Depart, ye discontents, like reprobates, 

For Patience all adversities endures ; 

In rarest disposition imitates 

Hearbe Panace, that all diseases cures, 

Heales interne maladies of wounded minds. 

And salves the sores that physicke salveless finds. 

Credit not vaine Perswasion, that deludes 

Fond Tractability with fallacies. 

And such inducements forcibly intrudes 

Into credulitie with sophistries, 

That man, whom reason's index should direct, 

Suggested is — true judgement to neglect. 

__ 



84 ARTHUR WARREN. 

Aske Contentation, what's felicity? 
And aske Felicity, what is content ? 
Aske Life, what is the death of misery ? 
And aske dumbe Death, what makes life perma- 
nent? 
Persue the contents of contented minde. 
Thou nought but Patience registred shalt finde. 

Discretion, censure, which is better found 
Much to possesse, and nathlesse live in neede, 
Or to enjoy but little, and abound, 
So competence necessities may steede. 
Brooks satisfie thirst with convenient store, 
The spacious ocean's liquid can no more. 



XI. 
HENRY FARLEY. 



LINES PRESENTED TO JAMES THE FIRST, 

WHEN HE TOOKE COACH AT THEOBALDS, IN HIS 
PROGRESSB TO SCOTLAND. 

Ride on with lionor, mighty king ! 
With princely high renovvne, 
From London unto Edenburgh, 
Thy native seate and towne ; 
And blessed be thy majestie, 
In every place thou goest, 
Unto the joy of man and boy, 
From highest to the lowest. 

Ride on, yee noble lords, also, 

God bless you and your master! 

And in the progresse as yee passe 

Defend you from disaster ; 

And Trinitie in Unitie 

Be still your guide and glory, 

That of this time each penne may rime 

A pleasant progresse story. 

And ride yee on, yee rev'rend ones, 

For you are for our soules ; 

And when you are at Edenburgh 

I pray remember Faules; 

For shee will pray, both night and day. 

For your prosper itie. 

Because your words much helpe affords 

In her necessitie. 



86 



HENRY FARLEY. 



Ride on, likewise, yee worthy knights, 

With jovialty and pleasure; 

And see you have a noble care 

To bring againe our treasure : 

Your fealty and loyalty 

The Lord will ever blesse, 

And for the same you shall get fame 

And heavenly happinesse. 

So ride you on, his officers. 

And yeomen strong and trusty ; 

Some guarde before, and some behinde,— 

Be valiant, bolde, and lusty: 

Yet see you be for courtesie 

In Scotland well commended. 

That love and peace may still increase, 

Untill the world be ended. 

And as in progresse, so in regresse, 

O let us ever pray. 

That God will blesse his majestic, 

And queene, and prince alway; 

That north and west, and south and east. 

His glory wee may sing, 

And nights and dayes give thanks and praise 

To James our sacred king. 



XII. 
GEORGE HERBERT. 



PSALM V. 



Lord, to my words incline thine ear, 
My meditation weigh : 
My King, my God, vouchsafe to hear 
My cry to thee, I pray. 

Thou in the morn shalt hear my mone. 
For in the morn will I 
Direct my prayers to thy Throne, 
And thither lift mine eye. 

Thou art a God, whose puritie 
Cannot in sins delight : 
No evil, Lord, shall dwell with thee, 
Nor fools stand in thy sight 

Thou hat'st those that unjustly do. 
Thou slay'st the men that lie ; 
The bloody man, the false one too, 
Shall be abhorr'd by thee. 

But in th' abundance of thy grace 
Will I to thee draw near. 
And toward thy most holy place 
Will worship thee in fear. 

Lord, lead me in thy righteousness. 
Because of all my foes; 
And to my dym and sinful eyes 
Thy perfect way disclose : 



88 GEORGE HERBERT. 

For wickedness their insides are, 
Their mouths no truth retain, 
Their throat an open sepulchur, 
Their flattering tongues do fain. 

Destroy them, Lord, and by their own 
Bad counsels let them fall 
In height of their transgression ; 
O Lord ! reject them all. 

Because against thy Majesty 
They vainly have rebell'd ; 
But let all those that trust in thee 
With perfect joy be fill'd. 

Yea, shout for joy for evermore. 
Protected still by thee ; 
Let tliem that do thy name adore 
In that still joyful be. 

For God doth righteous men esteem. 
And them for ever bless; 
His favour shalt encompass them, 
A shield in their distress. 



XIII. 
ANONYMOUS. 



THE CONVERT SOULE. 

Peace, catiffe body, earth possest, 
Cease to pretend to things too high : 
'Tis not thy place of peace and rest, 
For thou art mortall, and must die. 

Body. 

Poor soul, one Spirit made us both, 
Both from the vvombe of nothing came; 
And though to yeeld ought thou art loth. 
Yet I the elder brother am. 

I, as at home, can heare and see, 
And feele and tast of euery good ; 
But thou a stranger envy'st mee, 
My ease and pleasure, health and food. 

Then dream of shadowes, make thy coate 
Of tinsel'd cobwebs; get thy head 
Lyn'd with chymeras got by roate; 
And for thy food eat fairy bread. 

Soule. 

Stay, if thou can'st, thy mad career; 
Represse the storme of fruitless words ; 
He that would by thy com passe steer. 
Must hear what reason truth affords. 

'Tis true thou elder brother art; 

So wormes and beasts thy elder are; 



90 ANONYMOUS. 



Rude nature's first, then polisht art — 
The chaos was before a starre. 

My food and cloth are most divine ; 
The bread of angels, robes of glory ; 
Whilst all that sensuall stuft' of thine 
Is of a vaine life the sad story. 

Sences I have, but so refined, 
As vi^el become their mother soule, 
Which sute the pleasures of the mind, 
And scale the heavens without controule. 

I little care for such a feast. 
Which beasts can taste as well as I ; 
Nor am content to set my rest 
On goods in show, in deed a lie. 

Such cates and joyes do I bequeath 
To thee, fond body, which must die; 
For I pretend unto a wreath 
Wherein is writ eternity. 

Thou to thy earth must strait returne. 
Whilst I, whose birth is from above, 
Shall upward move, and euer burne 
Jn gentle flames of heavenly loue. 

Body. 

But I one person am with thee. 
And at the first was form'd by God ; 
Then must I needs for ever be 
Dead ashes, or a senceless clod? 

Soule, 

Or that, or worse : but quit thy sence 
To boast all body ; learne to fly 
Up with me, and for recompence 
At length thou blest shalt be as I. 



I 



THE CONVERT SOUL. 91 

Body. 

Then farewel, pleasures ; I nor care 
What you pretend, or what you doe ; 
He henceforth feed on angels' fare, 
For I an angell will be too. 

And for the way I am prepar'd 
To answer every ill with this ; 
"No way is long, or dark, or hard, 
That leads to everlasting bliss." 

Soule. 
Then w'are agreed ; and for thy fare. 
It wil be euery day a feast; 
Love playes the cooke, and takes the care 
Nobly to entertaine her guest. 

As for the trouble of the way, 
Which dark or streight, cannot be long. 
Faith wil inlarge, turne night to day. 
So wee'l to heaven goe in a song. 



SHOW ME MORE LOVE. 

Show me more love, my dearest Lord, 
Oh turne away thy clouded face, 
Give mee some secret looke or word 
That may betoken love and grace ; 
No day or time is black to mee 
But that wherein I see not thee. 
Shew me more love, a clouded face 
Strikes deeper then an angry blow; 
Love mee and kill mee by thy grace, 
I shall not much bewail my woe. 

But even to bee 

In heaven unlov'd of thee. 
Were hell in heaven for to see. 



92 ANONYMOUS. 



Then beare my cry and helpe afford : 
Show mee more love, my dearest Lord. 
Show mee more love, my dearest Lord, — 
I cannot think, nor speak nor pray; 
Thy work stands still, my strength is stor'd 
In thee alone. Oh come away ! 
Show me thy beauties, call them mine. 
My heart and tongue will soone be thine. 
Show me more love, or if my heart 
To common be for such a guest, 
Let thy good spirit, by its art, 
Make entry and put out the rest. 
For 'tis thy nest; 
Then hee's of heaven possest, 
That heaven hath in his breast. 
Then hear my cry, and help afford ; 
Show me more love, my dearest Lord. 



A CONSTANT MINDE. 

A CONSTANT minde ; an equall health, 
A friend that is a second self; 
A soul that doth all baseness fly, 
That wisheth not nor feares to dy : 
A state below pale envy's pitch, 
That rather is then seemeth rich, 
Adde but to this a good fit wife, 
And you summe up a happy life. 
A fickle minde, unconstant health, 
A friend that only seekes himself; 
A soule so base that it dare lye. 
And nothing feares more then to dye : 
A state and mind rais'd to that pitch, 
You may call great, but never rich : 
These with a foule and foolish wife. 
Conclude a most unhappy life. 



LORD OF MY GLORY. 93 



I^ORD OF MY GLORY. 

Lord of my glory, 
Heare a sad story, 
Pity a man who peace, more deare than life, 
Quits with himself, and thee to be at strife ; 
Pity a wretch who thee, the only good. 
Leaves, in vile puddles to seeke health and food. 
Ah! pity him who still is crying 
To thee for life, and still is dying. 

Lord of my glory, 
Heare a sad story, 
Pity a minde who was made to live in light, 
But clouded is with lies, false, blacke as night ; 
Pity a will where thy faire forme should dwell. 
But pester'd is with characters of hell. 
Ah ! dearest Lord, turne my sad story 
Into loud songs and hymnes of glory. 



A HYMN. 

Prince of Life, unvaile thy face, 
Let thy glories all appeare ; 
Give out freely of that grace 
Which hath cost thy love so deare. 

Blind I am, but in thy light 
Whoso placed is by thee, 
Thee and all things else shall see. 
Though he darker were then night. 

Deafe I am, but at thy voice 
Graves doe open, dust doth hve; 
Speake, Lord, make a joyfull noise, 
That may eare, and hearing give. 



94 ANONYMOUS. 



Puft I am so with the fumes 
That ascend from dunghill aires, 
As I sent not the perfumes 
Of thy merits and thy prayers. 

Sicke I am, and cannot tast 
That high fare of flesh and bloud, 
Which by death thou formed hast, 
To become a sinner's food. 

Dead I am in every part, 
Semelesse, stinking, cold, and such 
As my ill exceeds all art 
But of thy most gracious touch. 

Then, deare Lord, unvaile thy face, 
Let thy glories all appeare ; 
Give out freely of that grace 
Which hath cost thy love so deare. 



STANZAS. 



Love's a fire ever burning, 
Mounting high, though often turning; 
Quench it, y^ more is flaming; 
None can stifle it by taming. 

Lust's a fire, still consuming. 
Lighting never, ever fuming; 
Quench it, it is straight asvvaging; 
Give it vent, it's ever raging. 

Love's a spirit ever acting. 
Nought for love, but love exacting; 
Boundlesse in its search and notion, 
Restlesse in its course and motion. 



STANZAS. 95 

Lust's a spirit ever acting 

For vile ends, base work exacting, 

Lavves impossible affecting ; 

Nought but blind obedience expecting. 

Love's a starre grosse hearts refining, 
Clouded sometimes, and then shining; 
And this fortune telling ever, 
He who loveth ceaseth never. 

Lust's a wandrinor starre ne*re shininsr 
For our good, but still designing 
With her false lights to deceive us, 
And of truth and peace bereave us. 

Love's a river ever flowing. 

Fruit and plenty still bestowing ; 

Wafting us into an ocean 

Where we drovvne in love*s devotion. 

Lust's a river overflowing 
All her banks, to our undoing. 
And a sea that's ever raging — 
Neither heat nor thirst aswaging. 

Love's a garden where sweet flowers 
Yield their sent and shady bowers, 
Ready are to fill with pleasure 
Those who to love are at leisure. 

Lust's a garden void of flowers. 
Where wild weeds make bainfull bowers ; 
Fitted to destroy at leisure 
Those whose deity is pleasure. 

Love's a fort, whose highest tower 
Keeps a strict watch over bower ; 
Hath its parts so well combining. 
As it fears not force nor mining. 



96 ANONYMOUS. 



Lust's a fortresse, ever paying 
Those who trust it with betraying; 
And to yield so quickly signing, 
As it feares not force nor mining. 

Love's a temple, where is stor'd 
But one saint to be ador'd ; 
And whose altars feed their fire 
With heart single and intire. 

Lust's a temple, where the devill 
Under every shape that's evil 
Is adofd; and whose fires 
Black and scorch with foul desires. 

Love is musick, where the meeter 
Makes the harmony the sweeter; 
If y* tell a heavenly story, 
Tlien y^ musick turnes to glory. 

Lust is musick, where the poet 
Contributes so much unto it. 
As at y^ best what was but madnesse 
Ends in anguish and in sadnesse. 

Love's a master, ever pleasing, 
Bonds untying, burthens easing ; 
Chide he may, but never rages; 
One whose very work is wages. 

Lust is twenty thousand masters. 
Breaking heads and giving plaisters ; 
Fierce and foolish in commanding, 
To his bargaine never standing. 



THERE WAS A KING.'*'' 97 



"THERE WAS A KING/' 

There was a King of old, 
That did in Jewry dwell; ^ 

Whether a God, or man, or both, 
I'me sure I love him well. 

Love him ! why who doth not ? 
Did ever any wight 

Not goodnesse, beauty, sweetnesse, love- 
Not comfort, love, and light? 

None ever did, or can ; 
But here's the cause alone 
Why he of all few lovers finds: 
Alas ! he is not knowne. 

There are so many faire, 

Hee's lost amoung the throng; 

Yet they that seek him no where else, 

May finde him in a song. 

This King, then, was a man, 
Whose mother was a maide; 
Himself was God, and, if you doubt, 
Himself his mother made. 

A wonder sure it was. 

But so is all the rest : 

For whilst she bore him in her vvombe, 

She wore him on her breast. 

A King he was so high, 

As by him all kings raigne ; 

Yet was his pompe not very great — 

Twelve was his usuall traine. 

And though no other prince 

Did give a better pay. 

Yet when he stood in greatest need 

His subjects ran away. 

[jAMES I. POETS.] 



98 ANONYMOUS. 



This King he was a priest. 
He was the sacrifice ; 
And he also the aulter was, 
.The gift y* sanctifies. 

And though the sacrifice 
The priests did ever eate, 
The aulter, sacrifice, and priest. 
And all here made our meate. 

This God, Man, King, and Priest, 
Almighty was, yet meeke : 
He was most just, yet merciful!; 
The guilty did him seeke. 

He never any failed 

That sought him in their need; 

He never quenched the smoaking flaxe, 

Nor brake the bruised reed. 

He was the truest friend 

That ever any tryed ; 

For whome he loved he never left — 

For them he lived and dy'd. 

And if you 'Id know the folke 
Y*^ brought him to his end, 
Reade but his title, you shall finde 
Him styled 'the sinner's friend.' 

His life all wonder was. 
But beer's a wonder more, 
That he y*^ was all life and love. 
Should be belov'd no more. 

He love him while I live ; 

To those that be his foes. 

Though I them hate, I'll wish no worse 

Than his deare love to loose. 



HOW GOOD ART THOU/' 99 



"HOW GOOD ART THOU." 

How good art thou, O Lord! when we, unkind, 
Forgetting that thou art our life and joy, 
In following thee are deafe, in loving blind, 
And change thy comforte for the meanest toy : 
Thou still pursuest us with thy kisse and rod. 
And rod and kisse, till we do owne thee God. 

And when to ravell out thy worke againe. 
Our enemy consults with flesh and bloud. 
Makes strong assaults and charges us amaine, 
We foolish yeild — that foile is turn'd to good : 
Our Lord by death did Death most overcome, 
And our great foiles give sin its greatest doome. 

Yet must we not this circle overtread ; 
Thy love will force us out, or else thy wrath : 
When sin befriends us, 'tis y' we should dread 
The mighty one, that sin uhpoisoned hath : 
He that from sin by sinning God hath rid. 
Must sin defy with this, Now God forbid ! 



VICTORIOUS JESUS. 

\'iCTORious Jesus, though my heart 
Doth neither wealth nor beauty bring. 
Nor wit, nor worth, nor any thing 
That claimes a merit or desert ; 
Do not, oh do not say. Depart. 

For as some names to deeds are set. 

Not to convey an interest. 

But some great matter to attest ; 

So though I nothing bring thou'lt get, 

Fresh witnesse thou art faire and great. 



7—2 



100 ANONYMOUS. 



My breast was once most surely steel'd, 
With loue, and lust, and world, and sense, 
Both for assault and for defence ; 
But when thy beauties came in field, 
My armed heart was forced to yield. 

Thy beauties then may conquest boast 
Of all the world, because to me 
Wit, beauty, pleasure, all are lost. 
And whatsoever else there bee 
That can pretend no right to thee. 

Then as thy captive use thou me, 
Food, labour, and defence afford ; 
Let words and lookes be gentle, Lord ; 
That others yet uncaught and free, 
May wish to loose their liberty. 



XIV. 
ROBERT PRICKET. 



FAITH WITHOUT PRACTICE. 

All sorts can prate, and talke of tilings divine, 
In fewe or none a righteous life doth shine; 
What Adam lost, all human race did lose, 
And what he kept, that for our part we choose : 
Will to do good, that force in Adam died, 
Since when that grace was to his seed denied. 
So in ourselves since every action staines, 
That to do good in us no power remaines. 
We are restor'd by our Redeemer's hand; 
Not of ourselves, but by His grace we stand. 
Then let the soules of righteous men expresse, 
That in their Christ doth live their righteousness. 
Who to good fame by golden steps can mount 
Him doth this world for worthiest man accompt ; 
Let vertue in a poor man cleerly shine, 
A guilded gull is counted more divine. 
A sattin sute, bedawb'd with silvered lace, 
Beyond desert doth vildest clownship grace. 
Honest, if poore, he this reward must have. 
Hang him — base rogue, proud beggar, impious 

knave ! 
Rich let him be, and wlio can hurt him then ? 
Knaves wrapt in wealth are counted honest men. 



XV. 
ANONYMOUS. 



STANZAS. 

What if a day, a month, or a yeare, 

Croune thy dehghts with a thousand vvisht con- 

tentings. 
May not the chance of a night, or an howre, 
Crosse those delights with as many sad torment- 
ings? 
Fortune, honoure, beautie, youth, 

Are but blossomes dying ; 
Wanton pleasure, doting love, 
Are but shadowes flying. 
All our joyes 
Are but toyes. 
Idle thoughts deceaving : 
None hath power 
Halfe an howre 
Of his live's bereaving. 

The earth's but a pointe of the world, and a man 
Is but a poynte of the earth's compared center : 
Shall then a pointe of a pointe be so vayne 
As to delight in a sillie poynt*s adventer ? 
All's in hazard that we have, 

There is nothing byding ; 
Dayes of pleasures are like streames 
Through fay re medowes ghding. 
Weale or woe, 
Tyme doth goe, 
There is no returning. 
Secret fates 
Guide our states 
Both in myrth and mourning. 



STANZAS. 103 

What shall a man desire in this world, 

Since there is nought in this world that's worth 

desiring ? 
Let not a man cast his eyes to the earth. 
But to the heavens, with his thoughts high aspiring. 
Thinke that living thou must dye, 

Be assured thy dayes are tolde : 
Though on eartli thou seeme to he, 
Assure thyself thou art hut molde. 
All our health 
Brings no wealth, 
But returnes from whence it came ; 
So shall we 
All agree. 
As we be the very same. 



VERSES ON THE DEATH OF R. W. 

Such is the verse compos'd in mournefuU teene, 

Sadlie attyr'd in sorrowe's liverie : 

So sings poore Philomele, woods' ravisht queene, 

Progne's mad furie, Itis' tragedie, 

Pandion's death, and Tereus' trecherye ; 

Such songs in Canens' scalding tears were fram'd 

When Tibur's streames were last heard Picus nam'd. 

And such be myne, most meet for funerall ; 
A sable outside fits a mourning heart. 
And inward grief doth outward senses call 
In sorrow's quire to beare a weeping part. 
Teares be my inke, sad ensigne of my smart; 
My words be sighs, the caracters of woe. 
Which all mishaped like themselves doe show. 

First shall I moume thy too, too suddeyn death, 
Deare to my soule as to myselfe, wliich then, 



104 ANONYMOUS. 

Which then, alas 1 smothered thy feeble breath, 
When life had newly tane possession. 
In spring of years Death winter hastned on ; 
And enviouse of thy well-deserved prayse. 
Made winter's youth an end of winter's dayes. 

Like a fayre apple, which some ruder hand 

Ungently plucks, before it ripened be ; 

Or tender rose, enclosed in verdant band. 

New peeping forth from rugged rinde we see, 

To garnish out his fruitfull nursery e ; 

Till nipt by northerne blast, it hangs the head, 

All saplesse, livelesse, foule, and withered : 

Such be thy lookes, pale Death's usurped right. 
Such be the roses that adorn'd thy face, 
Such the bright lamps that gave thy bodie light, 
Such the all-pleasing, simple, modest grace. 
Which had theyr lodging in so sweet a place. 
Ah ! but thy better part far lovelyer is. 
Copartner now of Heaven's eternal blisse. 

Thee why doe I with womanish lament, 
Unseemlie teares, bewayle my losse in thee ? 
Stay but a while, and all my store is spent — 
Affection needs must beare a part with me, 
Since I must share my part with miserie. 
Goe, blessed soule as ever cut the sky. 
As e'er increased heaven's melodic. 

Joy in thy selfe as thy Redeemer's merit ! 
And now I take my loving last farewell : 
Rest to thy bones, blisse to thy gloriouse spirit. 
Thy memorie within this heart shall dwell. 
And therein shrin'd, nought shall thee thence 

expell. 
Take, mother earth, into thy frozen wombe 
This livelesse corse — thus earth to earth must come. 



XVI. 
HENRY PETOWE. 

STANZAS 

From "Eliza's Funeral.'' 

Then withered the primrose of delight, 
Hanging the head ore sorrowe's garden wall, 
When you might see all pleasures shun the light, 
And love obscuer, at Eliza's fall — 
Her fall from life to death : oh I stay not there ; 
Though she were dead, the shril-tong'd trump of 

heaven 
Rais'd her again : think that you see her heere, 
E'en heere, — oh, where? not heere; shee's hence 
For sweet Eliza in Elizium lives, [^bereaven ; 

In joy beyond all thought. Then weepe no more. 
Your sighing weedes put off; for weeping gives 
(Wayling her losse) as seeming to deplore 
Our future toward fortunes : mourne not, then ; 
You cease awhile, but now you weepe agen. 

Why should a soule in passion be denied 

To have true feelings of her essence misse? 

My soule hath lost herself; now deified, 

I needes must moane her losse, 'tho crown'd with 

blisse. 
Then give me leave, for I must weepe awhile, 
Till sorrow's deluge have a lower ebbe : 
Let lamentation never finde a stile 
To passe this dale of woe, untill the webbe 
Appointed for my latest mourning weed 
Be spun and woven with a heavie band ; 



106 



HENRY PETOWE. 



Then will I cease to vveepe, — I will indeed. 
And every beating billowe will withstand. 
'Twill not be long before this web be spun, 
Dy'd blacke, worne out, and then my teares be 
done. 

Of April's month the eight and twentith day, 

M. six hundred and three, by computation, 

Is the prefixed time for sorowe's stay ; 

That past, my mourning weedes grow out of 

fashion. 
Shall I by prayer hasten on the time ? 
Faine would I so, because mine eyes are drie. 
What cannot prayers doo for soules divine, 
Although the bodies be mortallitie ? 
Divine she is, for whom my muse doth mourne. 
Though lately mortall : now she sits on hie. 
Glorious in heaven, thither by angells borne, 
To live with Him in bliss eternally. 
Then come, faire day of joyfull smiling sorrow ; 
Since my teares dry, come, liappie day, to-morrow. 

Ye heralds of my heart, my heavie groanes. 

My teares which, if they could, would showre like 

raine, — 
My heavie lookes, and all my surdging mones, — 
My moaning lamentations that complayne, — 
When will you cease ? or shall paine never ceasing 
Seaze on my heart ? oh, mollifie your rage, 
Least your assaults, with over-swift increasing, 
Procure my death, or call on tymeles age. 
She lives in peace whome 1 doe mourne for so ; 
She lives in heaven, and yet my soule laments. 
Since shee's so happie, I'le converte my woe, 
To present joy turne all my languishments ; 
And with my sorrowes see the time doth wast. 
The day is come, and mid-day wel-nigh past. 



STANZAS. 107 

^ _ 

Gaze, greedy eye ; note what thou dost beholde : 

Our horizon's of a perfect hew, 

As cleere as cliristall, and the day not olde, 

Yet tliousand blacks present them to thy view : 

Three thousand and od hundred clowds appere 

Upon the eartlily element below, 

As blacke as night, trampling the lower sphere, 

As by degrees from place to place they goe, 

They passe away — oh, whither passe they then ? 

Into a further climate, out of sight ; 

Like clowds they were, but yet like clowded men. 

Whose presence turned the day to sable night. 

They vanish thence : note what was after seene — 

The lively picture of a late dead Queene ; 

Who, like to Phoebus in his golden car, 
Was the bright eye of the obscured day ; 
And though her glorious prograce was not far, 
Yet like the smiling sunne this semblance lay, 
Drawne in a jetty charriot, vayled with blacke. 
By four faire palfries, that did hang the head 
As if their lady mistres they did lacke. 
And they but drew the figure of the dead. 
Oh yee spectators, which did view tliat sight, 
Say, if you trulie say, could you refraine 
To shed a sea of teares in Deathe's despight, 
Tliat reft her hence, whom Art brought back 

againe ? 
He that knew her, and had Eliza seen. 
Would sweare that figure were faire England's 

Queene. 

" Faire England's Queene, e'en to the life, tho' 

dead ;" 
Speake, if I write not true, did you not crye — 
Cry foorth amaine, and say, " Her princely head 
Lay on a pillowe of a crimson dye, 



108 HENRY PETOWE. 



Like a sweat beauty in a harmless slumber ; — 
She is not dead : no, sure, it cannot be " ? 
Thus with unlikely hopes the vulgar number 
Flatter themselves — (oh, sweet-lyv'd flatterie !) 
Indeed, a man of judgment would have thought. 
Had he not known her dead, but seene her so 
Tryumphant drawne, in robes so richly wrought, 
Crowne on her head, in hand her sceptre too : 
At this rare sight he would have sworn and said, 
" To parliament rides this sweet slumb'ring maid." 

But that my warrant's seal'd by Truthe'sone' hand, 

That in her counterfeit Art did excell, 

I would not say that in this little land 

Pigmalion's equal doth admired dwell. 

Enough of that : — and now my teares are done, 

Since she that dy'd lives now above the spheres. 

Luna's extinct ; and now beholde the sunne. 

Whose beames soake up the moysture of all teares : 

A phoenix from her ashes doth arise, 

A King, at whose faire crowne all glory ayms ; 

God grant his royal vertues simpathize 

With late Eliza's ! — so God save King James ! 

He that in love to this saies not Amen, 

Pray God the villaine never speake agen ! Amen. 



own. 



XVII. 
ANONYMOUS. 



SONNET. 



Up, sluggish soule, awake, slumber no more ; 
This is no time to slecpe in sin secure ; 
If once the bridegi'oom passe and shutte the dore, 
No entrance will be gained, thou maist be sure. 
Now thou art up fill up thy lampe with oile, 
Hast thee and Ught it at the fire of loue ; 
Watch and attend : what is a little toile 
To gaine the entrance to the ioies aboue ? 
Go meete the bridegroom with low reuerence, 
Humbly with patience waite vpon his grace ; 
Follow his steppes with loue and diligence, 
Leaue all for Him, and only Him embrace : 
So shalt thou enter with him into rest. 
And at his heauenlie table sit and feast. 



THE PILGRIM'S SONG. 

What though I did possesse the greatest wealth. 
Though I were clad with honor and a crowne, 
And all my few and euill dales had health, 
Though no calamity did pluck me downe : 

What if in sensuall pleasures I did swym, 
Which mortall men account their chiefest bliss [ 
What jTood shal't be for me when death with him 
Brin^s^a diuorce from life, t'haue had all this.' 



110 ANONYMOUS. 



What plague wil't bee for me when rais'd againe 
Out of the bed of death, I must accompt 
For thousand thousand faultes and errors vaine 
That will to a number numberlesse amount, 

Before a judge whose angrie breath can burne 
This whole round globe of earth, fire, water, aire. 
And all their glory into ashes turne. 
That had these things allotted to their share ? 

Words serue me not, nor thoughts though infinite, 
To write or to imagine sinners' paine, 
Or the least torment that on them shall light 
That this world's loue prefer before heauen's gaine. 

Then couet not, mine eies, worldly delight — 
Beautie, great riches, honor, and the rest. 
Which if you had would but bereaue my spright 
Of the immortal ioyes I am in quest. 

I am a pilgrim-vvarriour bound to fight' 
Under the red crosse, 'gainst my rebell will, 
And with great Godfrey to employ my might 
To win Jerusalem and Sion hill. 

More glorious is it in that war to dye, 

Then surfett with the world's best delectation. 

Since this, when death shall shuttout mortall eye. 

For meede shal haue eternall condempnation ; 

But that not death, but life a passage is, 

Into a kingdome of perpetuall blis. 



GOD HEARS AND ANSWERS PRAYER. 

Feare not, my soule, thy teares-bedewed praiers. 
And thy repentant sighes, shall haue accesse 
Before the throne of heaven ; beleeue God cares 
For mortall men, and would their happine^se. 



GOD HEARS AND ANSWERS PRAYER. Ill 



The angells waite, and offer vp the cries 
Of soules tliat do repent of their amis ; 
A l)roken liart is a svveete sacrifice, 
Whose sauour at God's hand accepted is. 

From him thy praiers shall not retume in vaine, 
Hee is so mercifuU, so kind, so good: 
From true conuerts hee doth not long detaine 
The riches of his loue and pretious blood. 

Was not sick Hezekiatli's praier heard ? 

Or did his bitter teares fall vnrespected ? 

Nor ])raiers nor teares were of their entrance bard ; 

Both praiers and teares being so well directed. 

Swifter than swiftness vp to heauen they flew, 
And to tlie cares of God they were presented, 
Who swift to heare his seriiant humbly sew. 
Thus by his prophet's mouth his dome relented. 

I haard thy praier (said hee), and eke thy teares, 
And where with sicknesse thou wert visited. 
Behold ! I make the whole, and fifteene yeares 
Tliy life vpon the earth bee lengthened. 

Dispaire not, then, but with loud crieng craue, 
V^ from the staine of sin tliou maist bee free. 
And from the vault of heauen an eccho haue, 
Bee free ! O hart, soule, voice, in one agree: 

Importune all together to obtaine, 

Y' sweete reuiuing comfort in your paine. 



XVIII. 
EARL OF CUMBERLAND. 



PSALM XXXVIII. 

Lord, chide me not in the tempestuous day 

Of thy fierce wrath : O ! cast me not away 

In thy displeasure, least I fall at once ! 

Thy galling shafts lye quiuered in my bones. 

Prest by thy heauy hand I gaspe for breath ; 

Thine anger breeds diseases more than death : 

My flesh is mangled, and my bones within 

Consume and melt, for anguish of my sinne. 

My crying sinns above my head appeare, 

(Too heauy a weight, alas ! for me to beare,) 

My mortal wounds gangrene and putrify, 

And all because I have done foolishly ! 

Such misery and trouble I endure 

As all day long I beg, and find no cure. 

Lord, thou hast heard the ground of my complaint. 

And while I prayed thine eyes have seen me faint, 

My heart to beate and all my strength quite gone, 

Mine eyes, with weeping, blind as any stone; 

My friends, my neighbours, kinred, stand at gaze. 

While I in fires of persecution blaze : 

And those that sought my life in ambush lay. 

Cursing and lying, railing all the day. 

But I was stupid as the deaf and dumb. 

From whose shut doors no sharp rej)roofes do come ; 

And yet I hope, though I thus silent be. 

Thou, Lord, wilt plague and answer them for me. 

Lord, I have praid tiiat this malitious traine, 

May never flowte me (in thine anger slaine). 



PSALM XXXVIII. 



113 



Those, those I meane, that were delighted all 
To see me slip, and hope to see me fall. 
But O my sinne, that now tormenteth more 
My soule than all the paines my body bore. 
And now stands staring in my blushing face ! 
But, Lord, I will confess, and beg thy grace. 
And yet my haters Hue in height and power, 
Not to be numbred, that would me deyoure : 
All those that for my good repaid me ill 
Detest me more, submitted to thy will. 
Lord ! leaue me not, but make me thine abode ; 
Oh haste to helpe, my Saviour, oh my God ! 



[jAMtS I. rO£TS.] 



XIX. 
MICHAEL DRAYTON. 



THE TRIUMPH OF DAVID. 

And now before yong Dauid could come in, 
The host of Israel somewhat doth begin 
To rouze itselfe ; some climbe the nearest tree, 
And some the tops of tents, whence they might see 
How this vnarmed youth himselfe would beare 
Against th' all-armed giant (which they feare) : 
Some get vp to the fronts of easie hills, 
That by their motion a vast murmure fills 
The neighbouring valleys, that th' enemy thought 
Something would by the Israelites be wrought 
They had not heard of, and they longed to see 
What strange and warlike stratagem 't should be. 
When soone they saw a goodly youth descend, 
Himselfe alone, none after to attend. 
That at his need with armes might him supply, 
As meerely carelesse of his enemy . 
His head vncouered, and his locks of hayre. 
As he came on, being play'd with by the ayre, 
Tost to and fro, did with such pleasure moue, 
As they had beene prouocatiues for loue : 
His sleeues stript vp above his elbowes were. 
And in his hand a stifle short stafle did beare, 
Which by the leather to it, and the string. 
They easily might discerne to be a sling. 
Suting to these he wore a shepheard's scrip, 
Which from his side hung down vpon his hip. 
Those for a champion that did him disdainc, 
Cast with themselues what such a thing should 
meane ; 



THE TRIUMPH OF DA.VID. 115 



Some seeinpr hini so wonderousely faire, 

(As in tlieir eyes lie stood beyond compare.) 

Their verdict gaue, that they had sent him sure 

As a choice bayt tlieir champion to alure ; 

Others, againe, of judgment more precise, 

Said they had sent him for a sacrifice, 

And though he seem'd thus to be very young, 

Yet was he well proportioned and strong, 

And, with a comely and vndaunted grace, 

Holding a steady and most euen pace, 

This way, nor that way, neucr stood to gaze ; 

But, like a man that death could not amaze, 

Came close vp to Goliah, and so neare 

As he might easily reach him with his speare. 

Which when Goliah saw, " Why boy," quoth he, 
*' Thou desperate youth, thou tak'st me sure to be 
Some dog, I thinke, and vnder thy command, 
That thus art come to beat me with a wand : 
The kites and rauens are not farre away. 
Nor beasts of rauin, that shall make a prey 
Of a poore corpse, which they from me shall haue. 
And their foule bowels shall be all thy graue." 
" Vncircumcised slaue," quoth Dauid then, 
" That for thy shape the monster art of men, 
Tliou thus in brasse com'st arm'd into the field, 
And thy huge speare of brasse, of brasse thy shield : 
I, in the name of Israel's God alone, 
That more then mighty, that Eternall One, 
Am come to meet thee, who bids not to feare. 
Nor once respect the armes that thou dost beare. 
Slaue,marke the earth whereon thou now dost stand, 
He make thy length to measure so much land. 
As thou lyest groueling, and within this houre 
The birds and beasts thy carkasse shall deuoure." 

In meantime Dauid, looking in his face, 

Betweene his temples saw how large a space 

__ 



116 MICHAEL DRAYTOX. 

He was to hit, steps backe a yard or two ; 

The gyant, wond'ring what the youth would doe, 

Wliose nimble hand out of his scrip doth bring 

A pebble-stone, and puts it in his sling ; 

At which the gyant openly doth ieere, 

And, as in scorne, stands leaning on his speare, 

Which giues young Dauid much content to see, 

And to himselfe thus secretly saith he : 

" Stand but one minute still, stand but so fast, 

And haue at all Philistia at a cast." 

When with such slight the shot away he sent, 

That from his sling as 't had beene lightning went ; 

And him so full vpon the forehead smit, 

Which gaue a cracke when his thicke scalpe it hit, 

As't had beene thro wne against some rocke or post, 

That the shrill clap was heard through either host. 

Staggering awhile vpon his speare he leant, 

Till on a sodaine he began to faint. 

When downe he came, like an old oregrowne oake, 

His huge roote hewn vp by the labourer's stroke, 

That with his very weight he shooke the ground ; 

His brazen armour gaue a iarring sound, 

Like a crackt bell, or vessel chanct to fall 

From some high place, which did like death apall. 

The proud Philistians, (hopelesse that remaine). 

To see their champion, great Goliah, slaine, 

When such a shout the host of Israel gaue. 

As cleft the clouds ; and like to men that raue, 

(O'rcome with comfort) crye, " The boy, the boy ! 

the braue Dauid, Israel's onely joye ! 

God's chosen champion ! () most wondrous thing ! 

The great Goliah slaine with a poore sling !" 

Themselue incompasse, nor can they containe ; 

Now are they silent, then they shoute againe. 

Of which no notice Dauid seems to take, 

But towards the body of the dead doth make, 



THE TRIUMPH OF DAVID. 11 



With a faire comely gate^ nor cloth he runne 
As thoiigli he gloried in what he had done ; 
But treading on th' vncircumcised dead, 
With Ids foot strikes the helmet from his head ; 
Which with tlie sword tan from the gyant's side 
He fr'om the hody quickly doth diuide. 

Now the PhiHstians at this fearefrdl sight. 
Leaning their armes, betake themselues to flight. 
Quitting their tents, nor dare a minute stay. 
Time wants to carry anything away. 
Being strongly rowted with a generall feare, 
Vet in pursute Saul's army strikes the reare 
To Ekron's walles, and slew them as they fled, 
Tliat Sharam's plaines lay couered with the dead. 
And hauing put the Philistians to foyle, 
Baeke to the tents retire and take the spoyle 
Of what they left ; and ransacking, they cr}% 
" A Dauid, Dauid, and the victory!" 

When straightwaies Saul his generall, Abner, sent 
For valiant Dauid, that incontinent 
He should repaire to court ; at whose command 
He comes along, and beareth in his hand 
The gyant's head, by th' long hayre of his crowne, 
Wliich by his actiue knee hung dangling dovvne, 
And through the army as he comes along, 
To gaze vpon him the glad souldiers throng : 
Some doe instile him Israel's onely light. 
And other some the valiant Bethlemite. 
With coniayes* all salute him as he past, 
And vpon him their gracious glances cast : 
He was thought base of him that did not boast — 
Nothing but Dauid, Dauid, through the host. 
The virgins to their timbrels frame their layes 
Of him, till Saul grew iealous of his praise. 

' gate : gait. ^ coniayes : congees. 



118 MICHAEL DRAYTON. 

NOAH THRETNING GOD'S VENGEANCE 
VPON THE WORLD. 

A HUNDRED yeares the arke in building was, 
So long the time ere he could bring to passe 
This worke intended : all which time iust Noy 
Cry'd that th' Almighty would the world destroy. 
And as this good man vsed many a day 
To walke abroad his building to survay, 
These cruel 1 gyants comming in to see, 
(In their thoughts wond'ring what this worke 

should be) 
He with erected hands to them doth cry : — 
" Either repent ye, or ye all must die ; 
Your blasphemies, your beastlinesse, your wrongs. 
Are heard to heauen, and with a thousand tongues 
Showt in the eares of the Almighty Lord, 
So that your sinnes no leasure him affoord 
To think on mercy; they so thickly throng, 
That when he would your punishment prolong, 
Their horrour hales him on, that from remorce 
In his own nature you doe him inforce, 
Nay, wrest plagues from him vpon human kinde ; 
Who else to mercy wholly is inclinde. 
From Seth, which God to Eva gave in lew 
Of her Sonne Abel, whom his brother slue. 
That cursed Cain — how hath th' Almighty blest 
The seed of Adam, though he so transgrest. 
In Enos, by whose godlinesse men came 
At first to call on th* Almightie's name. 
And Enoch, whose integritie was such, 
In whom the Lord delighted was, so much 
As in his yeeres he suffered no decay, 
But God to heauen tooke bodyly away ; 



NOAH THREATENING GOd's VENGEANCE. 119 



With long life blessing all that goodlv stem, 
From the first man dovvne to Mathusalem. 
Now from the loynes of Lamech sendeth me 
(Vnworthy his ambassadoiir to be) 
To tell ye yet, if ye at last repent, 
He will lay by his wrathfull punishment ; 
That God, who was so mercifull before 
To our forefathers, likewise hath in store 
Mercy for vs, their nephues, if we fiill 
With teares before him ; and he will recall 
His wrath sent out already; therefore flye 
To him for mercy : yet the threat'ning skie 
Pauses, ere it the deluge downe will poure — 
For euery teare you shed he '11 stop a shower. 
Yet of th' Almighty mercy you may winne, 
He'll leaue to punish if you leaue to sinne. 
That God eternall which old Adam cast 
Out of the earthly heauen, where he had plac't 
That first-made man, for his forbidden deed, 
From thence for euer banishing his seed. 
For vs, his sinfull children, doth provide. 
And with abundance hath vs still supply'd : 
And can his blessings who respects you thus 
Make you most wicked, most rebellious ? 
Still is your stubborne obstinacy such ? 
Haue ye no mercy, and your God so much ? 
Your God, said I ? O wherefore said I so ? 
Your words deny him, and your works say ' No.' 
O see, the day doth but too fast approach. 
Wherein heauen's Maker means to set abroach 
That world of water, which shall ouerflow 
Those mighty mountaines whereon now you goe. 
The dropsied clouds, see, your destruction threat ; 
The sunne and moone both in their course are set 
To warre by water, and doe all they can 
To bring destruction vpon sinfull man ; 



120 MICHAEL DRAYTON. 

And euery thing shall suffer for your sake ; 
For the whole earth shall be but one whole lake. 
Oh, cry for mercy, leaue your wicked wayes, 
And God from time shall separate those dayes 
Of vengeance coming, and he shall disperse 
These clouds now threat'ning the whole vniverse, 
And saue the world which else he will destroy." — 
But this good man, this terror-preaching Noy, 
The beares and tigers might haue taught as well : 
They laught to heare this godly man to tell 
That God would drowne the world : they thought 

him mad. 
For their Great Maker they forgotten had. 



XX. 

JOHN VICARS. 



PSALM CV. 

O LAUD the Lord with invocation 
Amidst his holy congregation ; 
Shew forth his works, set forth his fame, 
Sing praise, sing praise unto his name ; 
And let the heart, and tongue, and voice 
Of them that love the Lord, rejoice. 

O seeke the Lord our God eternall, 

O seeke and search his power supemall ; 

O seeke and sue to come in sight 

Of his most lovely beauty bright; 

Of his most amiable face, 

Full of refulgent heavenly grace. 

Keepe still in due commemoration, 
Recount with true gratification 
The wondrous works which God had done, 
By famous facts his honour wonne; 
Let not his judgments just depart 
From your most mindful, thankful heart. 

Ye sacred sonnes regenerated, 

Ye saint-like seed, first propagated 

From Abraham, God's servant deare, 

Which him in faith doth loue and feare — 

Ye sons of Jacob, his delight, 

Extol the Lord's majesticke might. 

For Hee which safely us preserveth, 
He only of us best deserveth 



122 JOHN VICARS. 

To be our Lord and Soveraigne blest, 
Having apparently exprest 
His judgments just, his equity ; 
Which all the world can testifie. 

What he hath promised and protested 
To all that in his promise rested, 
Even to his saints a thousand fold. 
Which on him with faith's hand lay hold, 
Unto his everlasting praise, 
His word he hath made good always : 

E'en that blest promise once compacted, 
That cov'nant good, once precontracted 
To Abraham and Isaac's seed, 
And so to Jacob's sons decreed. 
And unto Israel stablisht sure. 
To time's last period to endure ; 

When in these words the Lord affirmed. 

And (thus) to those his truth confirmed ;— 

Behold, I Canaan freely give 

To you and yours, therein to live; 

This lot of your inheritance 

My name and fame (there) to advance. 

And tho' the number of that nation 

Was yet of slender valuation. 

Did yet but very small appeare, 

When (thus) his love esteemed them deare; 

And that beside their number small. 

They in the land were strangers all ; 

Walking from nation unto nation. 
Without all settled habitation, 
Now here, now there, conducted still 
By their all prudent Pilot's will; 
Who suifered no man wrong to take 
But plag'd princes for their sake. 



PSALM CV. 123 

And where they came, thus charg'd, appointed, 
Let none offend my deare anointed, 
Nor use my prophets spightfuUie ! 
For these are precious in mine eye. 
Fierce famine (then) the Lorde orelaide, 
Whereby their statfe of bread decaide : 

But God good Joseph then ordained, 

By whom (foresent) they were sustained, 

Tho' thither he a slave was sould, 

Tho' foes in fetters liim did liold, 

Untill, in heaven's appointed time, 

God heard his cause, cleared him of crime. 

Pharao him found a faithful liver, 
And him from prison did deliver, 
The ^Egyptian king was to him kinde, 
And in him did such wisdom finde, 
That of his kingdom and whole state 
He made him lord, prince, potentate. 

That all his peeres might be instructed. 
And to his lore and lure conducted. 
His senators by Joseph taught: 
Then Jacob was to Egypt brought — 
r th' land of Ham (then) Israeli 
Did as a harbour'd stranger dwell. 

His flocke, his flock (there) fructified. 
And to great numbers multiplied. 
And then their foes did farre transcend: 
Which only did their foes offend. 
Which turned their love to hatred great, 
Their smiles to guiles and slie deceipt. 

Mild Moses then the Lord elected, 
And holy Aaron much respected. 
Both whom to iEgypt soone he sent. 
There to declare his great intent. 



124 JOHN VICARS. 



And in the land of Ham to showe 
His signs and wonders, to their woe. 

Darknesse, strange darknesse, his commission, 
Did them obey with expedition, 
And overspread all Egypt's land : 
And by Heaven's all ore-ruling hand 
Their waters all gore blood became, 
And slew all fishes in the same. 

With croaking froggs he them infested. 
The land and lodgings where they rested. 
Not sparing Pharao's chamber neate: 
He sent huge swarms, noisome and greate. 
Of crawling lice and stinging flies 
'Mongst their heard-hearted enemies. 

Instead of raine haile-stones he rained, 

And with feirce flames of fire them bained, 

And thereby totallie orethrew 

Vines, fig-trees, yea, all trees that grevv; 

Their caterpillars did abound. 

Great grasshoppers their fruits confound. 

Their first-born babes he deadly wounded. 
And strongest of their land confounded, 
Yea, ev'n the prime of all their strength. 
And led his servants forth at length. 
All fraught with gold or silver store: 
Not one was feeble, faint, or poore. 

The i^gyptians' hearts were then revived. 
Being of their presence thus deprived, 
Such feare of them had broke their hearte; 
And as they thus did thence depart 
A cloud by day hid them from heate. 
Their guide by night a fire most great. 

At their request he quailes down rained. 
With manna sweet their state sustained. 



PSALM CV. 125 



Whiles through the wildernesse they went ; 
And then the rigid rocke he rent, 
From whence did floods of water flow, 
To quench their thirst, as they did goe. 

For as lie ever was dehghted 

With mindfuhicsse of promise plighted. 

So (then) the Lord did mind the same. 

And, to his everlasting fame, 

He brought them forth with mirth and joy 

Whence they had lived in dire annoy. 

Yea, such to them was his good pleasure. 
That all the labours, lands, and treasure 
Of heathen folke his flock did take, 
That they might not his lavves forsake, 
But faithfully observe his lore, — 
Oh let us praise the Lord therefore I 



XXI. 
FRANCIS QUARLES. 



LINES, 

From " The History of ^amson.^^ 

The Argument. 
He goes to Timnah : as he went 
He slew a lyon by the way; 
He sues, obtaines the maid's consent, 
And they appoint tlie marriage-day. 

SECTION VIII. 

When the next day had with his morning light 

Redeem'd the East from the dark shades of night, 

And with his golden rayes had overspred 

The neighb'ring moimtaines, from his loathed bed 

Sick-tho lighted Samson rose, whose watchfull eyes 

Morpheus that night had with his leaden keyes 

Not power to close : his thoughts did so incumber 

His restlesse soule, his eyes could never slumber; 

Whose softer language by degrees did wake 

His father's sleep-bedeafned eares, and spake ; 

" Sir, let your early blessings light upon 

The tender bosome of your prosprous sonne. 

And let the God of Israel repay 

Those blessings, double, on your head this day : 

The long since banisht shadowes make me bold 

To let you know the morning waxes old; 

The sun-beames are growne strong, their brighter 

hiew 
Have broke the mists and dride the morning dew; 
The sweetness of the season does invite 
Your steps to visit Timnah, and acquite 
Your last night's promise." 



LINES. 127 

With that the Danite and his wife arose, 
Scarce yet resolved ; at last they did dispose 
Their doubtfull paces to behold the prize 
Of Samson's heart, and pleasure of his eyes. 
Tliey went, and when their travell had attain'd 
Those fruitfuU hils whose clusters entertain'd 
Their thirsty palats with their swelling pride, 
The musing lover being stept aside 
To gaine the pleasure of a lonely thought, 
Appear d a full-ag'd lyon, who had sought 
(But could not find) his long-desired prey. 
Soone as his eye had given him hopes to pay 
His debt to nature, and to mend that fault 
His empty stomack found, he made assault 
Vpon th' unarm'd lover's breast, whose hand 
Had neither staffe nor weapon to withstand 
His greedy rage ; but he whose mighty strength 
Or sudden death must now appeare, at length 
Strecht forth his brawny arme, (his arme supplide 
With power from heaven,) and did with ease divide 
His body limme from limme, and did betray 
His flesh to foules that lately sought his prey. 
This done, his quick redoubled paces make 
His stay amends ; his nimble steps o'rtake 
His leading parents, who by this discover 
The smoake of Timnah : now the greedy lover 
Thinkes every step a mile, and every pace 
A measured league, untill he see that face. 
And finde the treasure of his heart that lies 
In the fair casket of his mistresse* eyes. 
But all this while close Samson made not knowne 
Vnto his parents what his hands had done. 
By this the gate of Timnah entertaines 
The welcome travellers ; the parents' paines 
Are now rewarded with their Sonne's best pleasure : 
The virgin comes ; his eyes can finde no leisure 



128 FRANCIS QUARLES. 

To owne another object. O the greeting 

Th' impatient lovers had at their first meeting ! 

The lover speakes ; she answers ; he replies ; 

She blushes ; he demandeth ; she denies ; 

He pleades affection ; she doubts ; hee sues 

For nuptiall love ; she questions ; he renewes 

His earnest suit: importunes; she relents; 

He must have no deniall ; she consents : 

They passe their mutuall loves ; their joyned hands 

Are equall earnests of the nuptiall bands. 

The parents are agreed ; all parties pleasM ; 

The daye's set downe ; the lovers hearts are eas'd ; 

Nothing displeases now but the long stay 

Betwixt th' appointment and the mariage-day. 

MEDITA VIII. 

'Tis too severe a censure : if the sonne 
Take him a wife ; the marriage fairely done, 
Without consent of parents (who perchance 
Had rais'd his higher price, knew where t' advance 
His better'd fortunes to one hundred more,) 
He lives a fornicator, she, a whore : 
Too hard a censure ! and it seems to me 
The parent 's most delinquent of the three. 
What if the better minded sonne doe aime 
At worth ? what if rare vertues doe inflame 
His rapt affection ? what if the condition 
Of an admired and dainty disposition 
Hath won his soule ? whereas the covetous father 
Findes her gold light, and recommends him rather 
T' an old worne widow, whose more weighty purse 
Is filled with gold, and with the orphan's curse ; 
The sweet exuberance of whose full-mouth'd 

portion 
Is but the cursed issue of extortion ; 



LINES. 129 

Whose worth, perchance, lies onely in her weight, 
Or in tlie bosome of her great estate. 
Wliat if the sonne (that does not care to buy 
Abundance at so deare a rate,) deny 
The soule-detesting profer of his father, 
And, in his better judgement, chooses rather 
To match with meaner fortunes and desert ? 
I thinke that Mary cliose the better part. 

What noble families (that have outgrowne 
The best records) have quite bin overthrowne 
By wilfuU parents, that will either force 
Their sonnes to match, or haunt them with a curse! 
That can adapt their humors to rejoyce 
And fcincy all things, but their children's choyce ! 
Which makes them often timorous to reveale 
The close desiers of their hearts, and steale 
Such matches as perchance their faire advice 
Might in the bud have hindred in a trice ; 
Which done, and past, then their hasty spirit 
Can thinke of nothing under disinherit : 
He must be quite discarded and exiled ; 
The furious father must renounce his childe ; 
Nor pray'r nor blessing must he have ; bereiven 
Of all ; nor must he live, nor die, forgiven ; 
When as the father's rashnesse oftentimes 
Was the first causer of the children's crimes. 

Parents, be not too cruel! ; children doe 
Things oft too deepe for us t* inquire into. 
What father would not storme if his wilde sonne 
Should doe the deed that Samson here had done ? 
Nor doe I make it an exemplar act, 
Onely let parents not be too exact. 
To curse their children, or to dispossesse Qblesse. 
Them of their blessings. Heaven may chance to 
Be not too strict ; faire language may recure 
A fault of youth, whilst rougher words obdure. 

[jAMES I. POKTb.J 9 



130 FRANCIS QUABLES. 



LINES, 

From "A Feast for Wormes.^^ 

The Argument. 

The Ninivites beleeve the word, 
Their hearts retiu'ne mito the Lord; 
In him they put their onely trust; 
They niourne in sackcloth and in dust. 

SECTION IX. 

So said ; the Ninivites beleev'd the word, 
Beleeved Jonas, and beleev'd the Lord. 
They made no pause, nor jested at the newes, 
Nor slighted it because it was a Jew's 
Denouncement : no, nor did their gazing eyes 
(As taken captive with such novelties) 
Admire the stranger's garb, so quaint to theirs ; 
No idle chat possest their itching eares 
The whilst he spake ; nor were their tongues on fier 
To raile upon, or interrupt the cryer ; 
Nor did they question whether true the message, 
Or fals the prophet were that brought th' em- 
bassage. 
But they gave faith to what he said : relented, 
And (changing their miswandred wayes) repented; 
Before the searching ayre could coole his word 
Their hearts returned and beleev'd the Lord ; 
And they, whose dainty lips were cloy'd while-ere 
With cates and viands and with wanton cheare. 
Doe now enjoyne their palats not to taste 
The offal bread (for they proclaim'd a fast) ; 
And they wliose looser bodies once did lie 
Wrapt up in robes and silkes of princely dye, 
Loe, now instead of robes in rags they mourne. 
And all their silks doe into sackcloth turne: 



LINES. 131 

They reade themselves sad lectures on the ground, 
Learning to want as well as to abound. 
The prince was not exempted, nor the peere, 
Nor yet the richest, nor the poorest there ; 
The old man was not freed, whose hoary age 
Had even almost outronne his pilgrimage ; 
Nor yet the young, whose glasse (but new begun) 
By course of nature had an age to runne : 

For when that fatall word came to the king, 
(ConvayM with speed, upon the nimble wing 
Of flitting fame,) he straight dismounts his throne, 
Forsakes his chaire of state he sate upon, 
Disrob'd his body, and his head discrown'd, 
In dust and ashes grov'ling on the ground ; 
And when he rear'd his trembling corps againe, 
(His haire all filthy with the dust he lay in) 
He, clad in pensive sackcloth, did depose 
Himself from state imperiall, and chose 
To live a vassall, or a baser thing, 
Than to usurpe the scepter of a king : 
(Respectlesse of his pompe) he quite forgate 
He was a monarch, mindelesse of his state ; 
He neither sought to rule or be obay'd, 
Nor with the sword nor with the scepter sway'd 

MEDITA IX. 

Is fasting then the thing that God requires ? 

Can fasting expiate or slake those fires 

That sinne hath blowne to such a mightie flame .' 

Can sackcloth clothe a fault, or hide a shame ? 

Can ashes cleanse thy blot, or purge thy offence .' 

Or doe thy hands make heaven a recompence, 

By strowing dust upon thy briny face ? 

Are these the tricks to purchase heavenly grace ? 

No ! though thou pine thyself with willing want, 

Or face looke thinne, or carkas nere so gaunt, 

9—2 



132 FRANCIS QUARLES. 

Although thou worser weeds than sackcloth weare, 
Or naked goe, or sleep in shirts of haire, 
Or though thou chuse an ash-tub for thy bed, 
Or make a daily dunghill on thy head ; 
Thy labour is not poys'd with equal gaines, 
For thou hast nought but labour for thy paines. 
Such holy madnesse God rejects, and loathes 
That sinks no deeper than the skin or clothes : 
'Tis not thine eyes which (taught to weepe by 

art) 
Look red with teares (not guilty of thy heart) ; 
'Tis not the holding of thy hands so high, 
Nor yet the purer squinting of thine eye ; 
'Tis not your mimick mouthes, your antick faces, 
Your scripture phrases or affected graces. 
Nor prodigall upbanding of thine eyes. 
Whose gashfuU bals doe seeme to pelt the skies ; 
'Tis not the strickt reforming of your haire. 
So close that all the neighbour skull is bare ; 
'Tis not the drooping of thy head so low. 
Nor yet the low'ring of thy sullen brow. 
Nor wolvish howling that disturbs the aire, 
Nor repetitions, or your tedious prayer : 
No, no, 'tis none of this that God regards ; 
Such sort of fooles their owne applause rewards : 
Such puppet plaies to heaven are strange and 

quaint. 
Their service is unsweet and foully taint. 
Their words fall fruitlesse from their idle braine. 
But true repentance runnes in other straine ; 
Where sad contrition harbours, there the heart 
Is truely acquainted with the secret smart 
Of past offences, hates the bosome sin 
The most which most the soul took pleasure in ; 
No crime unsifted, no sinne unpresented. 
Can lurke unseene ; and scene, none unlamented. 



LINES. 133 

The trouble soule's amazed witli dire aspects 

Of lesser sinnes committed, and detects 

The wounded conscience ; it cries amaine 

For mercy, mercy, cries, and cries againe : 

It sadly grieves, and soberly laments, 

It yernes for grace, reformes, returnes, repents. 

I, this is incense, whose accepted favour 

Mounts up the heavenly throne and findeth favour: 

I, this is it whose valour never failes — 

With God it stoutly wrestles and prevailes : 

I, this is it that pearces heaven above. 

Never returning home (like Noah's dove) 

But brings an olive- leafe, or some increase, 

That workes salvation and etemall peace. 



LINES, 
From " Job Militant.'' 

The Argument, 

Job wisheth his past happinesse, 
Shewes his state present, doth confesse 
That God's the author of his griefe, 
Relates the pureiiesse of his life. 

SECTION XV. 

Oh ! tliat I were as happy as I was 
When heaven's bright favours shone upon my face, 
And prosper'd my affairs, inrich'd my joyes. 
When all my sonnes could answer to my voyce ; 
Then did my store and thriving flocks encrease, 
Offended justice sought my hands for peace; 
Old men did honour, and the young did feare me, 
Princes kept silence, (when I spake) to heare mee : 
1 heard the poore, reliev'd the widowe's crie, 
Orphans I succour'd, was the blind man's eye, 



134 FRANCIS QUARLES. 

The cripple's foot, my lielplesse brother's drudge. 
The poore man's father, and the oppressor's judge. 
I then supposed that my dayes' long lease 
Would passe in plentie, and expire in peace ; 
My rootes were fixed, and my branches sprung, 
My glory blazed, my power grew daily strong; 
I speaking, men stood mute, my speeches mov'd 
All hearts to joy, by all men were appro v'd : 
My kindly words were welcome as a latter 
Raine, and were oracles in a doubtfuU matter. 

O sudden change ! I'm turned a laughing-stocke 
To boyes, and those that su'd to tend my flock, 
And such whose hungry wants have taught their 

hands 
To scrape the earth, and dig the barren lands 
For hidden roots, wherewith they might appease 
Their tyran stomacks, these (even very these) 
Flout at my sorrowes, and disdaining me. 
Point with their fingers, and cry, This is he ! 
My honour 's foyl'd, my troubled spirit lyes 
Wide open to the worst of injuries ; 
Where e'r 1 turne my sorrow new appeares, 
I'm vex'd abroad with flouts, at home with feares; 
My soule is faint, and nights, that should give ease 
To tyred spirits, make my griefes encrease ; 
I loath my carkeise, for my ripened soares 
Have changed my garment's colour with their 

cores. 
But what is worst of worsts. Lord, often I 
Have cry'd to thee, a stranger to my cry; 
Though ])erfect clemency thy nature be, 
Though kinde to all, thou art unkinde to me : 
I ne'r wax't pale to see another thrive, 
Nor e'er did let my afflicted brother strive 
With tears alone : But I (poore I) tormented, 
Expect for succour, and am unlamented : 



LINES. 135 

I mourne in silence, lanfruisli all alone, 

As in a desert am reliev'd by none : 

My sores have dy'd my skin with filth, still tuniing 

My joyes to griefe, and all my mirth to mourning. 

My heart hath past indentures with mine eye 
Not to behold a maid ; for what should 1 
Expect from heaven, but a deserv'd reward 
Earn'd by so foule a sinne ? for deaths prepared 
And flames of vvrath are blowne for such : doth He 
Not know my actions that so well knowes me ? 
If I have lent my hands to tiye deceit, 
Or if my steps have not been purely straight. 
What 1 have sowne then let a stranger eate. 
And root my plants untimely from their seate. 
If 1 with lust have e'r distain'd my life, 
Or been defiled with another's wife, 
In equall iustice let my wife be knowne 
Of all, and let me reape as I have sowne ; 
For lust that burneth in a sinfull brest 
Till it hath burnt him too, shall never rest. 
If e'r my haste did treat my servant ill, 
Without desert making my power my will. 
Then how should I before God's judgement stand, 
Since we were both created by one hand ? 
If e'r my power wronged the poore man's cause. 
Or to the widow length'ned out the lawes ; 
If e'r alone my lips did taste my bread. 
Or shut my churlish doores the poore unfed. 
Or bent my hand to doe the orphan wrong, 
Or saw him naked, unapparell'd long ; 
In heapes of gold if e'r 1 took delight. 
Or gave heaven's worship to the heavenly light ; 
Or e'r was flatter'd by my secret will ; 
Or joyed in my adversarie's ill : 
Let God accurse me from his glorious seate, 
And make my plagues (if possible) more great. 



136 FRANCIS QUARLES. 

Oh ! that some equall hearer now were by 
To judge my righteous cause : full sure am I 
I shall be quitted by th' Almightie hand. 
What therefore if censorious tongues withstand 
The judgement of my sober conscience ? 
Compose they ballads on me, yet from thence 
My simple innocence shall gaine renowne, 
And on my head Tie weare them as my crowne: 
To the Almightie's eare will I reveale 
My secret wayes : to him alone appeale. 
If (to conclude) the earth could finde a tongue 
T^ impeach my guiltlesse hands of doing wrong : 
If hidden wages (earn'd with sweat) doe lie 
Rak't in her furrowes, let her wombe deny 
To blesse my harvest, let her better seeds 
Be turn'd to thistles, and the rest to weeds. 

MEDITA XV. 

The man whose soule is undistain'd with ill. 
Pure from the check of a distemper'd will. 
Stands onely free from the distracts of care. 
And flies a pitch above the reach of feare ; 
His bosome dares the threatening bowman's arme. 
His wisdome sees, his courage feares no harme ; 
His brest lies open to the reeking sword ; 
The darts of swarthy Maurus can affoord 
Lesse dread than danger to his well-prepar'd 
And setled minde, which (standing on her guard) 
Bids mischiefe doe the worst she can or will ; 
For he that does no ill deserves no ill. 

Would any strive with Samson for renowne. 
Whose brawney arme can strike most pillars down ? 
Or try a fall with angels, and prevaile ? 
Or with a hymne unhinge the strongest iayle? 
Would any from a pris'ner prove a prince ? 
Or with slow speech best orators convince ? 



LINES. 187 

Preserve he then unstained in his brest 
A milk-white conscience, let his soule be blest 
With simple innocence ; this sevenfold shield 
No dart shall pierce, no sword shall make it yeeld ; 
The sinewy bow, and deadly-headed launce, 
Shall break in shivers, and the splinters glaunce 
Aside, returning backe from whence they came, 
And wound their hearts with an eternall shame. 
The just and constant minde that perseveres 
Vnblemisht with false pleasures, never feares 
The bended threatenings of a tyrann's brow- 
Death neither can disturbe, nor change his vow. 
Well guarded with himself he walkes along. 
When most alone he stands a thousand strong. 

Lives he in weale and full prosperitie ? 
His wisdom tels him that he lives to die ; 

Is he afflicted ? sharpe afflictions give 
Him hopes of change, and that he dyes to live ; 

Is he revild and scomd ? he sits and smiles, 
Knowing him happy whom the world reviles. 
If rich, he gives the poore, and if he live 
In poore estate, he findes rich friends to give : 
He lives an angel in a mortall forme ; 
And having past the brunt of many a storme. 
At last arriveth at the haven of rest. 
Where that just Judge that rambles in his brest, 
Joyning with angels, with an angel's voyce 
Chaunts forth sweet requiems of eternall joyes. 



138 FRANCIS QUARLES. 



SONNETS, 

From " Pentelogia." 
Mors Christi. 
And am I here, and my Redeemer gone ? 
Can he be dead, and is not my life done ? 
Was he tormented in excesse of measure, 
And doe I live yet? and yet live in pleasure ? 
Alas ! could sinners finde out ne'r a one 
More fit than thee for them to spit upon ? 
Did thy cheekes entertaine a traytor's lips ? 
Was thy deare body scourg'd and tome with whips. 
So that the guiltlesse blood came trickling after? 
And did thy fainting browes sweat blood and water ? 
Wert thou (Lord) hang'd upon the cursed tree ? 
O world of griefe ! and was all this for me ? 
Burst forth, my teares, into a world of sorrow, 
And let my nights of griefe finde ne'r a morrow : 
Since thou art dead (Lord) grant thy servant roome 
Within his heart to build thy heart a tombe. 

Mors Tna. 

Can he be faire, that withers at a blast ? 
Or he be strong, that ayery breath can cast ? 
Can he be wise, that knovves not how to live ? 
Or he be rich, that nothing hath to give ? 
Can he be young, that's feeble, weake, and wan? 
So faire, strong, wise, so rich, so young is man : 
So faire is man, that death (a parting blast) 
Blasts his faire flow'r, and makes him earth at last ; 
So strong is man, that with a gasping breath 
He totters, and bequeathes his strength to death ; 
So wise is man, that if with death he strive 
His wisdome cannot teach him how to live ; 
So rich is man that (all his debts b'ing paid) 
His wealth's the winding-sheet wherein he's laid; 



SONNETS. 139 



So young is man, that, broke with care and sorrow, 

He's old enough to day to dye to-morrow. 

Why bragg'st thou then, thou worme of five foot 

long ; 
Th' art neither faire, nor strong, nor wise, nor rich, 

nor yong. 

Gloria Cceli. 

When I behold, and well advise upon 

The wise man's speech. There's nought beneath 

the sun 
But vanitie, my soule rebels within. 
And loathes the dunghill prison she is in: 
But when I looke to new Jerusalem, 
Wherein 's reserv'd my crowne, my diadem, 
O what a heaven of blisse my soule enjoyes, 
On sudden wrapt into that heaven of ioyes ! 
Where (ravisht in the depth of meditation) 
She well discernes, with eye of contemplation. 
The glory of God in his imperiall seat ; 
Full strong in might, in majestic compleate. 
Where troops of powers, vertues, cherubims, 
Angels, archangel, saints and seraphims. 
Are chaunting praises to their heavenly King — 
Where Hallelujah they for ever sing. 



SIGN'S SONNETS. 

Bridegroom. 

Now rests my love : till nuw her tender brest, 
Wanting her joy, could finde no peace, no rest ; 
I charge you all, by the true love you beare 
To friendship, or what else you count most deare, 
Disturbe her not, but let her sleep her fill : 
I charge you all upon your lives be still. 



140 FRANCIS QUARLES. 

O may that labouring soule that lives opprest 
For me, in me receive eternall rest. 

What curious face is this ? what mortall birth 
Can shew a beauty thus unstain'd with earth ! 
What glorious angell wanders there alone, 
From earth's foule dungeon, to my father's throne! 
It is my love ; my love that hath deny'd 
The world for me, it is my fairest bride ; 
How fragrant is her breath ! how heavenly faire 
Her angel face ! each glorifying the ayre. 

Bride. 

O how I'm ravisht with eternall blisse ! 
Whoe'r thought heaven a joy compar'd to this ? 
How doe the pleasures of this glorious face 
Adde glory to the glory of his place ! 
See how kings' courts surmount poore shepheards' 

eels, 
So this the pride of Salomon excels ; 
Rich wreathes of glory crowne his royall head, 
And troopes of angels waite upon his bed. 

The court of princely Salomon was guarded 
With able men at armes ; their faith rewarded 
With fading honours, subject to the fate 
Of fortune, and the jealous frownes of state : 
But here the harmonious quire of heaven attend, 
Whose prize is glory, glory without end, 
Vnmixt with doubtings or denegerous feare — 
A greater prince than Salomon is here. 

The bridall bed of princely Salomon, 
Whose beauty amaz'd the greedy lookers on. 
Which all the world admired to behold. 
Was but of cedar, and her sted of gold, 
Her pillars silver, and her canopie 
Of silkes, but richly stain'd with purple die. 



sign's sonnets. 141 



Her curtaines wrought in vvorkes, workes rarely led 
By th' needles' art : such was the bridall bed. 

Such was the bridall bed, which time, or age. 
Durst never warrant from th' approbrious rage 
Of envious fate, earth's measures but a minute ; 
Earth fades, all ftides upon it, all within it ; 
O but the glory of thy divined place 
No age can injure, nor yet time deface ; 
Too weak an object for weake eyes to bide, 
Or tongues t' expresse: who ever saw't but dy'd. 

Whoe'r beheld the royall crown set on 
The nuptiall brovves of princely Salomon ? 
His glorious pompe whose honour did display 
The noysed triumphs of his marriage-day : 
A greater prince than Salomon is here. 
The beauty of whose nuptials shall appeare 
More glorious, farre transcending his, as farre 
As heaven's bright lamp outshines th' obscurest star. 



FUNERALL ELEGIES. 
ELEGY VII. 

GoE, glorious saint ! I knew 'twas not a shrine 
Of flesh could lodge so pure a soule as thine ; 
I saw it labour (in a holy scorne 
Of living dust and ashes) to be swome 
A heavenly quirister : it sigh'd and groan'd 
To be dissolv'd from mortall, and enthron'd 
Among his fellow-angels, there to sing 
Perpetuall anthems to his heavenly King : 
He was a stranger to his house of clay ; 
Scarce own'd it, but that necessary stay 
Miscall'd it his ; and onely zeale did make 
Him love the building for the builder's sake. 



142 FRANCIS QUARLES. 



ELEGY XIII. 

No, no, he is not dead ; the mouth of fame, 
Honor's shrill herald, would preserve his name, 
And make it live in spight of death and dust, 
Were there no other heaven, no other trust. 
He is not dead: the sacred nine deny 
The soule that merits fame should ever die : 
He lives, and when the latest breath of fame 
Shall want her trumpe, to glorify a name, 
He shall survive, and these selfe-closed eyes 
That now lie slumbering in the dust shall rise, 
And, fill'd with endlesse glory, shall enjoy 
The perfect vision of eternall joy. 

ELEGY XX. 

Vnconstant earth ! why doe not mortals cease 
To build their hopes upon so short a lease ? 
Vncertaine lease, whose terme but once begun, 
Tels never when it ends till it be done : 
We dote upon thy smiles, not knowing why. 
And whiles we but prepare to live, we die : 
We spring like flowers for a daye's delight, 
At noone we flourish, and we fade at night. 
Wetoylefor kingdomes, conquer crownes, and then 
We that were gods but now, now lesse than men. 
If wisdome, learning, knowledge, cannot dwell 
Secure from change, vaine bubble earth, farewell ! 



XXII. 
SIR JOHN BEAUMONT. 



OF THE EPIPHANY. 

Fa I RE easteme starre, that art ordain'd to runne 

Before the sages to the rising sunne, 

Here cease thy course, and wonder that the cloud 

Of this poore stahle can thy Maker shroud : 

Ye lieauenly bodies glory to be bright, 

And are esteem'd as ye are rich in light ; 

But here on earth is taught a different way, 

Since vnder this low roofe the Highest lay ; 

Jerusalem erects her stately towres, 

Displayes her windowes, and adornes her bowres : 

Yet there thou must not cast a trembling sparke — 

Let Herod's palace still continue darke. 

Each schoole and synagogue thy force repels, 

There pride, enthron'd in misty errours, dwels ; 

The temple where the priests maintaine their quire 

Shall taste no beame of thy celestiall fire. 

While this weake cottage all thy splendor takes, 

A joyfuU gate of euery chinke it makes. 

Here shines no golden roofe, no lury staire, 

No king exalted in a stately chaire, 

Girt with attendants, or by heralds styl'd ; 

But straw and hay inwrap a speechlesse childe. 

Yet Sabije's lords before this babe vnfold 

Their treasures, off'ring incense, myrrh, and gold. 

The cribbe becomes an altar ; therefore dies, 

Nor oxe nor sheepe, for in their fodder lies 

The Prince of Peace, who, thankfuU for his bed, 

Destroyes those rites in which their blood was shed: 



]44 SIR JOHN BEAUMONT. 

The quintessence of earth, he takes and fees, 

And precious gummes distill'd from weeping trees; 

Rich metals and sweet odours now declare 

The glorious blessings which his lawes prepare : 

To clear vs from the base and lothsome flood 

Of sense, and make vs fit for angels' food ; 

Who lift to God for vs the holy smoke 

Of feruent prayers, with which we him inuoke, 

And trie our actions in that searching fire 

By which the seraphims our lips inspire. 

No muddy drosse pure min'ralls shall infect, 

We shall exhale our vapours vp direct : 

No stormes shall crosse, nor glittering lights deface, 

Perpetual sighes, which seek a happy place. 



OF THE TRANSFIGURATION OF OUR 
LORD. 

Yee that in lowly valleyes weeping sate. 
And taught your humble soules to mourne of late 
For sinnes, and suff"'rings breeding griefes and feares, 
And made the riuers bigger with your teares, 
Now cease your sad complaints till fitter time. 
And with those three belou'd apostles clime 
To lofty Thabor, where your happy eyes 
Shall see the sunne of glory brightly rise : 
Draw neere, and euer blesse that sacred hill, 
That there no heate may parch, no frost may kill 
The tender plants ; nor any thunder blast 
That top, by which all mountaines are surpast. 
By steepe and briery paths ye must ascend : 
But if ye know to what high scope ye tend. 
No let nor danger can your steps restraine — 
The crags will easie seeme, the thickets plaine. 



TRANSFIGURATION OF OUR LORD. 145 

Our Lord there stands, not with hispainefull crosse 
Laid on his shoulders, mouing you to losse 
Of precious things, nor calHng you to beare 
Tiiat burden which so much base worldlings feare. 
Here are no promist hopes obscur'd with clouds, 
No sorrow with dim vailes true pleasure shrowds, 
But perfect ioy, which here discouered shines, 
To taste of heauenly light your thoughts inclines, 
And able is to weane deluded mindes 
From fond delight, which wretched mortals blinds. 
Vet let not sense so much your reason sway, 
As to desire for euer here to stay ; 
Refusing that sweet change which God prouides 
To those whom with his rod and staffe he guides. 
Your happinesse consists not now alone 
In those high comforts, which are often throwne 
In plenteous manner from our Sauiour's hand, 
To raise the fall'n, and cause the weake to stand : 
But ye are blest, when being trodden downe, 
Ye taste his cup, and weare his thorny crowne. 



AN ODE OF THE BLESSED TRINITIE. 

MvsE, that art dull and weake, 

Opprest with worldly paine, 

If strength in thee remaine 

Of things diuine to speake. 
Thy thoughts awhile from vrgent cares restraine, 
And with a cheareful voice thy wonted silence 
breake. 

No cold shall thee benumme, 

Nor darknesse taint thy sight; 

To thee new heate, new light, 

Shall from this obiect come, 

[jAMES I. POETS.] 10 



146 SIR JOHN BEAUMONT. 



Whose praises if thou now wilt sound aright, 
My pen shall giue thee leaue hereafter to be 
dumbe. 

Whence shall we then begin 

To sing, or write of this, 

Where no beginning is ? 

Or if we enter in 
Where shall we end ? The end is endlesse blisse— 
Thrice happy we, if well, so rich a thread we spinne. 

For Thee our strings we touch, 

Thou that art Three and One, 

Whose essence though vnknowne, 

Beleeu'd is to be such; 
To whom whatere we giue, we giue thine owne. 
And yet no mortal tongue can giue to thee so much. 

8ee how in vayne we trie 

To finde some tipe t' agree 

With this great One in Three, 

Yet can none such descrie : 
If any like, or second were to Thee, 
Thy hidden nature then were not so deepe and high. 

Here faile inferiour things, — 

The sunne, whose heate and light 

Make creatures warme and bright, 

A feeble shadow brings : 
The sunne shewes to the world his Father's might, 
With glorious raies fro' forth, our fire, the spirit, 
sings. 

Now to the toplesse hill 

Let vs ascend more neare, 

Yet still within the spheare 

Of our connat'ral skill ; 
We may behold how in our soules we beare 
An vnderstanding power ioyn'd with effectual skill. 

We cannot higher goe 

To search this point diuine : 



AN ODE OF THE BLESSED TRINITY. 147 

Here it doth chiefly shine, 

This image must it show : 
These steppes, as helpes, our humble minds incline 
T' embrace those certaine grounds which from 
true faith must flow. 

To him these notes direct, 

Who not with outward iiands, 

Nor by his strong commands, 

Whence creatures take eff'ect. 
While perfectly himselfe he vnderstands, 
Begets another selfe with equall glory deckt. 

From these, the spring of loue, 

The Holy Ghost proceeds, 

Who our aftection feeds 

With those cleare flames whicli moue 
From that eternal essence which them breeds, 
And strikes into our soules as lightning from aboue. 



ON ASCENSION DAY. 

Ye that to heau'n direct your curious eyes, 
And send your minds to walk the spacious skies, 
See how the Maker to yourselues he brings, 
Who sets his noble markes on meanest things ; 
And hauing man aboue the angels plac'd, 
The lowly earth more than the heau'n hath grac'd. 
Poore clay ! each creature thy degrees admires. 
First God in thee a liuing soule inspires, 
Whose glorious beames hath made thee farre 

more bright 
Then is the sunne, the spring of corp'rall light : 
He rests not here, but to himselfe thee takes. 
And thee diuine by wondrous vnion makes. 
What region can aff'ord a worthy place 
For his exalted flesh ? heau'n is too base : 



148 SIR JOHN BEAUMONT. 



He scarce would touch it in his swift ascent ; 
The orbes fled backe, Uke Jordan, as he went : 
And yet he daign'd to dwell awhile on earth, 
As paying thankeftill tribute for his birth. 
But now this body all God's workes excels, 
And hath no place, but God, in whom it dvvels. 



AN ACT OF CONTRITION. 

When first my reason, dawning like the day, 
Disperst the clouds of childish sense away ; 
God's image fram'd in that superior tow'r, 
Diuinely made mine vnderstanding pow'r 
To thinke vpon his greatnesse, and to feare 
His darts of thunder, which the mountaines teare. 
And when with feeble light my soule began 
T' acknowledge him a higher thing then man, 
My next discourse, erected by his grace, 
Conceiues him free from bounds of time or place, 
And sees the furthest that of him is knowne, 
All spring from him, and He depends of none. 
The steps which in his various workes are seal'd, 
The doctrines in his sacred church reueal'd. 
Were all receiu'd as truths into my mind. 
Yet durst I breake his lawes — O strangely blind ! 
My festring wounds are past the launcing cure, 
Which terrour giues to thoughts at first impure. 
No helpe remaines these vlcers to remoue, 
Vnlesse I scorch them with the flames of loue. 
Lord, from thy wrath my soule appeales, and flyes 
To gracious beames of those indulgent eyes, 
Which brought me first from nothing, and sus- 
tain e 
My life, lest it to nothing turne againe, 



AN ACT OP CONTRITION. 149 

Which in thy Sonne's blood vvasht my parents* sinne, 
And tauglit me waies eternall blisse to winne. 
The starres which guide my bark with heauenly 

calls ; 
My boords in shipwrack after many falls ; 
In these I trust, and, wing'd with pleasing hope, 
Attempt new flight to come to thee, my scope, 
Whom I esteeme a thousand times more deare 
Than worldly things which faire and sweet appeare. 
Rebellious flesh, which thee so oft offends 
Presents her teares : alas, a poore amends ! 
But thou acceptst them. Hence they precious 

grow 
As liuing waters which from Eden flow. 
With these 1 wish my vitall blood may runne, 
Ere new eclipses dimme this glorious sunne ; 
And yeeld my selfe afflicting paines to take 
For thee my spouse, and onely for thy sake. 
Hell could not fright me with immortall fire, 
Were it not arm'd with thy forsaking ire ; 
Nor should I looke for comfort and delight 
In heau'n, if heau'n were shadow'd from thy sight. 



AN ACT OF HOPE. 

Sweet hope is soueraigne comfort of our life. 
Our ioy in sorrow and our peace in strife. 
The dame of beggers, and the queene of kings : 
Can those delight in height of prosperous things 
Without expecting still to keepe them sure ? 
Can those the weight of heauy wants endure, 
Vnlesse perswasion instant paine allay, 
Reseruing spirit for a better day ? 
Our God, who planted in his creatures' brest 
This stop on which the wheeles of passion rest, 



150 SIR JOHN BEAUMONT. 

Hath raysd by beanies of his abundant grace 

This strong affection to a higher place. 

It is the second vertue which attends 

That soule whose motion to his sight ascends. 

Rest here, my mind ; thou shalt no longer stay 

To gaze vpon these houses made of clay : 

Thou shalt not stoope to honours, or to lands, 

Nor golden halles, where sliding fortune stands. 

If no false colours draw thy steps amisse, 

Thou hast a palace of etemall blisse ; 

A paradise from care and feare exempt, 

And obiect worthy of the best attempt. 

Who would not for so rich a country fight ? 

Who would not runne that sees a gaole so bright ? 

O thou who art our Author and our end. 

On whose large mercy chaines of hope depend, 

Lift me to thee by thy propitious hand ; 

For lower I can find no place to stand. 



I 



A DIALOGUE BETWEENE THE WORLD, 
A PILGRIM, AND VERTUE. 

Pilgrim. 

What darknes clouds my senses ? hath the day 
Forgot his season, and the sunne his way ? 
Doth God withdraw his all-sustaining might. 
And works no more with his faire creature, light. 
While heau*n and earth for such a losse complaine. 
And turne to rude vnformed heapes againe ? 
My paces with intangling briers are bound. 
And all this forrest in deepe silence drown'd ; 
Here must my labour and my iourney cease. 
By which in vaine I sought for rest and peace ; 



A DIALOGUE, ETC. 151 

But now perceiue that man's vnquiet mind 
In all his waies can onely darknesse finde. 
Here must I starue and die, vnlesse some light 
Point out the passage from this dismall night. 

World. 

Distressed pilgrim, let not causelesse feare 
Depresse thy hopes, for thou hast comfort neare, 
Which thy dull heart with splendor shall inspire, 
And guide thee to thy period of desire. 
Clear vp thy brovves, and raise thy fainting eyes ; 
See how my glittering palace open lies 
For weary passengers, whose desp'rate case 
I pitie, and prouide a resting-place. 

Pilgrim. 

thou whose speeches sound, whose beauties shine 
Not like a creature, but some power diuine, 
Teach me thy stile, thy worth and state declare, 
Wliose glories in this desart hidden are. 

World. 

1 am thine end ; Felicity my name ; 

The best of Wishes, Pleasures, Riches, Fame, 
Are humble vassals which my throne attend. 
And make you mortals happy wlien I send : 
In my left hand delicious fruits 1 hold. 
To feede them who with mirth and ease grow old, 
Afraid to lose the fleeting dayes and nights ; 
That seaze on times, and spend it in delights. 
My right hand with triumphant crownes is stor'd, 
Which all the kings of former times ador'd : 
These gifts are thine : then enter where no strife, 
No griete, no paine, shall interrupt thy life. 



152 



SIR JOHN BEAUMONT. 



Vertue. 
Stay, hasty wretch, here deadly serpents dwell, 
And thy next step is on the brinke of hell : 
Wouldst thou, poore weary man^ thy limbs repose ? 
Behold my house, where true contentment growes ; 
Not hke the baites which this seducer glues. 
Whose bhsse a day, whose torment euer liues. 

World. 

Regard not these vaine speeches, let them goe ; 
This is a poore worme, my contemned foe, 
Bold thredbare Vertue ; who dare promise more 
From empty bags, than I from all my store ; 
Whose counsels make men draw vnquiet breath, 
Expecting to be happy after death. 

Vertue. 

Canst thou now make, or hast thou euer made 
Thy seruants happy in those things that fade ? 
Heare this my challenge : one example bring 
Of such perfection ; let him be the king 
Of all the world, fearing no outward check. 
And guiding others by his voice or beck : 
Yet shall this man at eu'ry moment find 
More gall than hony in his restlesse mind. 
Now, monster, since my words haue struck thee 

dumb. 
Behold this garland, whence such vertues come ; 
Such glories shine, such piercing beames are 

throwne 
As make thee blind, and turne thee to a stone. 
And thou, whose wand'ring feet were running 

downe 
Th' infernall steepnesse, looke vpon this crowne : 



A DIALOGUE, ETC. 153 



Within these folds lie hidden no deceits, 
No golden lures, on which perdition waites ; 
But when thine eyes the prickly thornes haue past, 
See in the circle boundlesse ioyes at last. 

Pilgrim. 

These things are now most cleare ; thee I imbrace : 
Immortall wreath, let worldlings count thee base; 
Choyce is thy matter, glorious is thy shape. 
Fit crowne for them who tempting dangers scape. 



OF TEARES. 



Behold what riuers feeble nature spends, 
And melts vs into seas at losse of friends : 
Their mortall state this fountain e neuer dies, 
But fills the world with worlds of weeping eies. 
Man is a creature borne and nurst in teares, 
He through this life the markes of sorrow beares, 
And dying, thinkes he can no off'ring haue 
More fit then teares distilling on his graue. 
We must these floods to larger bounds extend ; 
Such streames require a high and noble end. 
As waters in a chrystall orbe contain'd 
Aboue the starry firmament, are chain'd 
To coole the fury of those raging flames 
Which eu'ry lower spheare by motion frames ; 
So this continuall spring within thy head 
Must quench the fires in other members bred. 
If to our Lord our parents had been true. 
Our teares had been like drops of pleasing dew : 
But sinne hath made them full of bitter paines, 
Vntimely children of afflicted braines : 
Yet they are chang'd, when we our sinnes lament, 
To richer pearles then from the East are sent. 



154 



SIR JOHN BEAUMONT. 



OF SINNE. 

What pensill shall I take or where begin 

To paint the vgly face of odious sinne ? 

Man sinning oft, though pardon'd oft, exceeds 

The falling angels in malicious deeds : 

When we in words would tell the sinner s shame, 

To call him diuell is too faire a name. 

Should we for euer in the chaos dwell, 

Or in the lothsome depth of gaping hell, 

We there no foule and darksome formes shall find 

Sufficient to describe a guilty mind. 

Search through the world, we shall not know a 

thing 
Which may to reason's eye more horrour bring 
Then disobedience to the Highest Cause, 
And obstinate auersion from his lawes. 
The sinner will destroy God if he can — 
what hath God deseru'd of thee, poore man, 
That thou shouldst boldly striue to pull him downe 
From his high throne, and take away his crowne ? 
What blindnesse moues thee to vnequall fight ? 
See how thy fellow-creatures scorne thy might ; 
Yet thou prouok'st thy Lord, as much too great. 
As thou too weake for his imperiall seate. 
Behold a silly wretch distracted quite, 
Extending towards God his feeble spite, 
And by his poys'nous breath his hopes are faire 
To blast the skies, as it corrupts the aire, 
Vpon the other side thou may'st perceiue 
A mild commander, to whose army cleaue 
The sparkling starres, and each of them desires 
To fall and drowne this rebell in their fires. 
The cloudes are ready this proud foe to tame. 
Full fraught with thunderbolts and lightning's flame. 



OF SIN. 155 

The Earth, his motlier, greedy of his doome, 
Expects to open her vnhappy wombe, 
That this degen'rate sonne may liue no more ; 
So chang'd from that pure man whom first she 

bore. 
The sauage beasts, whose names his Father gaue. 
To quell this pride their Maker's licence craue. 
The fiends his masters in this warlike way, 
Make sute to seaze him as their lawfuU prey. 
No friends are left : then whither shall he flie ? 
To that offended King who sits on high. 
Who hath deferr'd the battell, and restrain'd 
His souldiers, like the winds in fetters chain'd : 
For let the sinner leaue his hideous maske, 
God will as soone forgiue, as he shall aske. 



IN SPIRITUAL COMFORT. 

Enough delight, O mine eternall good ! 
I leare to perish in this fiery flood ; 
And doubt, lest beames of such a glorious light 
Should rather blind me, then extend my sight : 
For how dare mortals here their thoughts erect 
To taste those ioyes which they in heauen expect ? 
But God inuites them in his boundless loue. 
And lifts their heauy minds to things aboue. 
Who would not follow such a pow'rfull guide, 
Immid'st of flames, or through the raging tide ? 
What carelesse soule will not admit the grace 
Of such a Lord, who knowes the dang'rous place 
In which his seruants liue — their natiue woes, 
Their weake defence, and fury of their foes ; 
And casting downe to earth these golden chaines, 
From hel's steepe brinke their sliding steps re- 
strain es ? 



156 SIR JOHN BEAUMONT. 

His deare affection flies with wings of haste ; 
He will not stay till this short life be past : 
But in this vale, where teares of griefe abound, 
He oft with teares of ioy his friends hath drown'd. 
Man, what desir'st thou ? wouldst thou purchase 

health. 
Great honour, perfect pleasure, peace, and wealth ? 
All these are here, and in their glory raigne : 
In other things these names are false and vaine. 
True wisdome bids vs to this banquet haste, 
That precious nectar may renew the taste 
Of Eden's dainties, by our parents lost 
For one poore apple, which so deare would cost. 
That eu'ry man a double death should pay. 
But mercy comes the latter stroke to stay 
And — leauing mortall bodies to the knife 
Of iustice — striues to saue the better life. 
No sou'raigne med'cine can be halfe so good 
Against destruction as this angels* food. 
This inward illustration, when it finds 
A seate in humble and indifferent minds. 
If wretched men contemne a sunne so bright, 
Dispos'd to stray and stumble in the night, 
And seeke contentment where they oft haue 

knowne, 
By deare experience, that there can be none ; 
They would much more neglect their God, their 

end, 
If aught were found whereon they might depend, 
Within the compasse of the gen'rall frame ; 
Or if some sparkes of this celestiall flame 
Had not engraued this sentence in their brest : 
In him that made them is their onely rest. 



INORDINATE LOVE OF CREATURES. 157 

AGAINST INORDINATE LOUE OF 
CREATURES. 

Ah ! who would loue a creature, who would place 
His heart, his treasure, in a thing so base ? 
Which time consuming, like a moth, destroyes, 
And stealing death will rob him of his ioyes. 
Why lift we not our minds aboue this dust ? 
Haue we not yet perceiu d that God is iust, 
And hath ordain'd the obiects of our loue 
To be our scourges, when we wanton proue ? 
Go, carelesse man, in vaine delights proceed, 
Thy fansies and thine outward senses feede ; 
And bind thyselfe, thy fellow-seruant's thrall : 
Loue one too much, thou art a slaue to all. 
Consider when thou follow'st seeming good, 
And drown'st thyselfe too deepe in flesh and blood, 
Thou making sute to dwell with woes and feares, 
Art sworne their souldier in the vale of teares : 
The bread of sorrow shall be thy repast ; 
Expect not Eden in a thorny waste, 
Where grow no faire trees, no smooth riuers swell, 
Here onely losses and afflictions dwell. 
These thou bewayl'st with a repining voyce, 
Yet knew'st before that mortal! was thy choyse. 
Admirers of false pleasures must sustaine 
The waight and sharpnesse of insuing paine. 



OF THE MISERABLE STATE OF MAN. 

Is man, the best of creatures, growne the worst ? 
He once most blessed was, now most accurst : 
His whole felicity is endlesse strife, 
No peace, no satisfaction crownes his life : 



158 SIR JOHN BEAUMONT. 



No such delight as other creatures take, 
Which their desires can free and happy make : 
Our appetites, which seek for pleasing good, 
Haue oft their wane and full, their ebbe and floud, 
Their calme and storm es : the neuer- constant 

moone, 
The seas, and nimble winds, not halfe so soone, 
Incline to change, while all our pleasure rests 
In things which vary, like our wau'ring brests. 
H e who desires that wealth his life may blesse, 
Like to a sayler, counts it good successe 
To haue more prisoners wliich increase his care ; 
The more his goods, the more his dangers are. 
This sayler sees his ship about to drowne, 
And he takes in more wares to presse it downe. 
Vaine honour is a play of diuers parts, 
Whose fained words and gestures please our 

hearts ; 
The flatt'red audience are the actor's friends. 
But lose that title when the fable ends. 
The faire desire that others should behold 
Their clay well featured, their well-temperd mould, 
Ambitious mortals make their chiefe pretence, 
To be the obiects of delighted sense : 
Yet oft the shape and hue of basest things 
More admiration moues, more pleasure brings. 
Why should we glory to be counted strong ? 
This is the praise of beasts, the pow'r of wrong : 
And if the strength of many were inclos'd 
Within our brest, yet when it is oppos'd 
Against that force which art or nature frame, 
It melts like waxe before the scorching flame. 
We cannot in these outward things be blest ; 
For we are sure to lose them ; and the best 
Of these contentments no such comforts beares 
As may waigh equall with the doubts and feares 



OF THE MISERAHLE STATE OF MAN. 159 



Which fixe our minds on that vncortaine day 
Wiien these shall faile, most certaine to decay. 
From length of life no happinesse can come, 
But what the guilty feele, who after doome 
Are to the lothsome prison sent again e, 
And there must stay to die with longer paine. 
No earthly gift lasts after death, hut fame ; 
This gouerns men more carefuU of their name 
Then of their soules, which their vngodly taste 
Dissolues to nothing, and shall proue at last 
Farre worse then nothing : prayses come too late 
When man is not, or is in wretched state. 
But these are ends which draw the meanest hearts: 
Let vs search deepe and trie our better parts. 

knowledge, if a heau'n on earth could be, 

1 would expect to reape that blisse in thee : 
But thou art blind, and they that haue thy light 
More clearely, know they Hue in darksome night. 
See, man, thy stripes at schoole, thy paines abroad, 
Thy watching and thy palenesse well bestow'd : 
These feeble helpes can scholers neuer bring 

To perfect knowledge of the plainest thing : 

And some to such a height of learning grow. 

They die pers waded that they nothing know. 

In vaine swifte houres spent in deepe study slide, 

Vnlesse the purchast doctrine curbe our pride. 

The soule perswaded that no fading loue 

Can equall her imbraces, seekes aboue : 

And now aspiring to a higher place, 

Is glad that all her comforts here are base. 



XXIII. 
EDMUND DEE. 



EXTRACT, 

From " Verses against Popery." 

Unto my exortacon attend and give eare ; 
You that walke in darknes I wish you beware ; 
For now the Ught shineth so perfect and cleere, 
All men they mai venter. 

With God and our kinge now lett us agree 
In fayth and true love ; for soo itt must bee ; 
The perfect waie and the true veritee 
Therin lett vs venter. 

To doo them good is all my intentt 
That waver and wander : if they doe repente, 
From ignorant foUie with on consentt, 
With Christ they may enter. 

Now God hath sent us, all men maie see, 
A noble Kinge James (soe named is hee) 
To maintaine the gospell, the true veritee — 
With him let us venter. 

All they that were blinded did hope for a dale 
To bringe in the pope, to whom they obeye ; 
But God bee thanked, that liveth for aye, 
Nowe they shall not enter. 

The pope with his pardons for silver and gould, 
Long time hatli deceived boeth yoonge and ould ; 
The blessing of God is not to be sould — 
Take heede howe you venter. 



VERSES AGAINST POPERY. 161 

Perchaunce you will marvell, 

And tliinke in your minde 

Whence 1 have this knowledge, 

And see me soe blind ; 

All those that seeke, Christ saith they shall finde — 

To Him lett us venter. 

My hartt and mind nowe doth rejoyce 
Your noble grace to see, 
I am a subject poore and basse— 
My name is — Edmund Dee. 



[jAMES I. POETS.] 11 



XXIV. 
BENJAMIN JONSON. 



TO THE WORLD. 

False world, good night ; since thou hast brought 

That lioure upon my morne of age, 

Henceforth 1 quit thee from my thought ; 

My part is ended on thy stage. 

Doe not once hope that thou canst tempt 

A spirit so resolv'd to tread 

Upon thy throat and live exempt 

From all the nets that thou can'st spread. 

I know thy formes are studied arts. 

Thy subtil 1 wayes be narrow straits ; 

Thy curtesie but sudden starts, 

And what thou call'st thy gifts are baits. 

I know too, though thou strut, and paint, 

Yet art thou both shrunke up, and old ; 

That onely fooles make thee a saint, 

And all thy good is to be sold. 

I know thou whole art but a shop 

Of toyes, and trifles, traps and snares 

To take the weak, or make them stop; 

Yet art thou falser than thy wares. 

And, knowing this, should I yet stay, 

Like such as blow away their lives, 

And never will redeeme a day, 

Enamord of their golden gyves? 

Or having scap'd shall I returne, 

And thrust my neck into the noose, 

From whence so lately I did burne 

With all my powers my selfe to loose? 



J\ 



TO TftHE WORLD. 163 

Wliiit bird or beast is kuovvne so dull, 

That fled his cage, or broke his chaine, 

And tasting aire and freedome, wull 

Render his head in there againe I 

If these who have but sense can sliun 

The engines that have them annoy'd, 

Little for mee had reason done 

If I could not thy ginnes avoid. 

Yes, threaten, doe. Alas, I feare 

As little as 1 hope from thee ! 

I know tliou canst nor shew nor beare 

More hatred than thou hast to mee. 

My tender, first and simple yeares 

Thou didst abuse, and then betray; 

Since stird'st up jealousies and feares 

When all the causes were away. 

Then in a soile hast planted me 

Where breathe the basest of thy fooles ; 

Where envious arts professed be, 

And pride and ignorance the schooles ; 

Where nothing is examin'd, weigh'd, 

But as 'tis rumor'd so beleev'd : 

Where every freedome is betray'd. 

And every goodnesse tax'd, or griev'd. 

But what we are borne for wee must beare ; 

Our frail condition it is such 

That what to all may happen here, 

If't chance to mee, I must not grutch. 

Else I my state should mucli mistake 

To harbour a divided thought 

From all my kinde : that for my sake 

There should a miracle be wrought. 

No, I doe know that I was borne 

To age, misfortune, sicknesse^ griefe : 

But 1 will beare these with that scorne 

As shall not need thy false rehefe. 

11—2 



164 BENJAMIN JONSON. 



Nor for my peace will 1 goe farre, 
As wand'rers doe, that still doe rome: 
But make my strengths, such as they are, 
Here in my bosome and at home. 



ON THE NATIVITIE OF MY SAVIOUR. 

I SING the birth was bom to night, 
The Author both of life and light; 

The angels so did sound it. 
And like the ravish'd sheep'erds said, 
Who saw the light, and vvere afraid, 

Yet searched, and true they found it. 

The Sonne of God, th' Eternall King, 
That did us all salvation bring, 

And freed the soule from danger; 
Hee whom the whole world could not take, 
The Word, which heaven and earth did make. 

Was now laid in a manger. 

What comfort by him doe wee winne. 
Who made himself the price of sinne, 

To make us heires of glory ? 
To see this babe all innocence, 
A martyr borne in our defence ; 

Can man forget this storie ? 



EUPHEME'S MIND. 

Painter, you're come, but may be gone. 
Now 1 have a better thought thereon, 
This work I can performe alone. 
And give you reasons more then one. 



eupheme's mind. 165 

Not that your art I doe refuse, 
But here I may no colours use; 
Beside, your hand will never hit, 
To draw a thing that cannot sit. 

You could make shift to paint an eye, 
An eagle towring in the skye, 
The sunne, a sea, or soundlesse pit ; 
But these are like a mind, not it. 

No, to expresse a mind to sense. 
Would aske a Heaven's intelligence ; 
Since nothing can report that flame 
But what's of kinne to whence it came. 

A mind so pure, so perfect, fine. 
As 'tis not radiant, but divine; 
And so disdaining any tryer, 
'Tis got where it can try the fire. 

There high exalted in the spheare. 
As it another nature were 
It moveth all, and makes a flight 
As circular as infinite. 

Whose notions when it will expresse 
In speech, it is with that excesse 
Of ^8ice and musique to the eare. 
As what it spoke it planted there. 

The voyce so sweet, the words so faire. 
As some soft chime had stroak'd the ayre ; 
And though the sound were parted thence, 
Still left an eccho in the sense. 

But, that a mind so rapt, so high. 

So swift, so pure, should yet apply 

It selfe to us, and come so nigh 

Earth's grossnesse ; there's the how, and why. 



166 



BENJAMIN JONSON. 



Is it because it sees us dull, 
And stuck in clay here, it would pull 
Us forth by some celestiall flight 
Up to her owne sublimed hight ? 

Or hath she here, upon the ground, 
Some paradise or palace found 
In all the bounds of beautie fit 
For here to inhabit? There is it. 

Thrice happy house, that hast receipt 

For this so loftie forme, so streight, I 

So pohsht, perfect, round, and even. 

As it slid moulded off from heaven. 

Not swelling like the ocean proud. 

But stooping gently, as a cloud. 

As smooth as oyle pour'd forth, and calme 

As showers, and sweet as drops of balme. 

Smooth, soft, and sweet, in all a floud 
Where it may run to any good ; 
And where it stayes, it there becomes 
A nest of odorous spice and gummes. 

In action, winged as the wind, 
In rest, like spirits left behind 
Upon a banke or field of flowers, 
Begotten by that wind and showers. 

In thee, faire mansion, let it rest. 
Yet know with what thou art possest ; 
Thou entertaining in thy brest 
But such a mind, mak'st God thy guest. 



1 



XXV. 
CHRISTOPHER LEVER. 



STANZAS 

From " Queene EUzabetVs Teares.'' 

Men are iniurious that report of death 

To be the higliest of extremities ; 

When as we die what loose we else but breath? 

And many numbers of our miseries, 

When this life setts, as better doth arise : 
And when to death a holy cause is giuen, 
Death is the gate by which we enter heauen. 

Within our life these sorrow es we containe, 

Vncertaine dales, yet full of certaine griefe, 

In number few, but infinite in paine ; 

O're chargde with wants, but naked of reliefe, 

In ruling it our euill partes are chiefe : 

And though our time be not cut short by death, 
Olde age will creepe to stop uncertaine breath. 

Yet to the much affliction of the minde 
This of the body is a scant compare. 
Wherein so many and so much I find, 
As would astonne my spirits to declare ; 
Triall can onely tell us what they are : 

For we whom custom hath with griefe acquainted 
By vs her sad proportion best is painted. 
The griefe of mind is tiiat intestine warre 
That stirres sedition in the state of man ; 
Where when our passions once commanding are, 
Our peacefull dayes are desperate, for than 
The stirres more bote than when it first began ; 
For heady passion's like an vntamed beast. 
That riots most when we desire it least. 



168 CHRISTOPHER LEVER. 

This violence exceedes his vertuous meane, 
Like swelling tides that ouerrunne their shore, 
Leaning the lawfull current of their streame, 
And breake their bankes that bounded them before : 
Yet griefe in his great violence is more : 

For if that reason bound not griefe with lawes. 
In our destruction griefe will be the cause. 

Griefe should be borne with much indifference;, 
Not much regarded, yet regardlesse neuer ; 
Not much affected, yet we must haue sense 
To feele our griefe and apprehend it euer ; 
Yet let the grieued ever thus indever 

To make his burthen easeful as hee may, 
And so his griefe with ease is borne away. 

So much of griefe we onely doe sustaine, 
As in our choice ourselues do apprehend ; 
Griefe may present it selfe, but not constraine 
That we imbrace what it doth recommend. 
Beare it but lightly then ; for to that end 
Is patience giuen, by whose resolued might 
The heauiest loade of griefe is made but light. 

This is the most of happinesse we haue, 
That with our patience we support our cares ; 
Nor we our selues, but God this vertue gaue, 
Which our vnworthie life right well declares ; 
To loose my life is for to loose my cares : 

Then what is death that I should feare to die ? 

Death is the death of all my miserie. 

What then is that which doth beget desire 
In humane flesh to linger our long dales ? 
Is it because to honor men aspire, 
Or for their name in beautie hath a praise ? 
Or is't their greedy auarice them stales ? 



STANZAS. 169 

Honour, beaiitie, nor desire of golde, 
Cannot the certaine of their death withhold. 

Honour is nothing but a very name, 
Often confer'd to men of little m^rite ; 
In euery place as common is as fame, 
Commonly giuen to euery common spirite ; 
So little worth as anie one may weare it : 

Then why should that be thought of estimation 
That'giues to base deseruings high creation? 

The name and place of honour may be giuen, 
As please the prince in fauour to dispose ; 
But true deriued honor is from heauen, 
And often hues in meane estate with those 
That to the courts of princes neuer goes. 

How vainly prowd are such as would get fame. 
Yet get no more of honor but the name I 
m * * * * * 

He that from enuious eie and full resort 
Lines priuate, with a little state content, 
Little desires the honour of the court, 
Where emulation stirres a discontent ; 
Men shoote at him that is most eminent, 

And whom the prince with hiest grace doth 
crown, 

Enuy brings many hands to pull him downe. 

See here the glorie of mortallitie. 

Which we with infinite of care pursue, 

PainefuU to get, but lost at libertie ; 

Fatall to many, fortunate to few. 

Whereto so many miseries insue 

As fills our time with cares : then why should I 
For this respect of honour feare to die ? 



XXVL 
THOMAS DEKKER. 



CHRIST'S COMING TO JUDGEMENT. 

As in an army royali, led by a king, 
After the canons' sulphurous thundering ; 
Horror on all sides roaring; wings here flying 
At wings like armed eagles ; here troopes dying 
A butcherous execution through the field, 
Bellowing with fiend-like threats, where yet none 

yeeld, 
Though death stalkes vp and downe, ghastly and 

pale, 
The victor's wreath lying in a doubtfull scale ; — 
The king himselfe safe guarded on a hill, 
Seeing this black day, yet stirring not vntill 
He findes fit time to strike ; then downe amayne 
Whorrying he comes — a glorious dreadful trayne 
Of high heroic spirits circUng him round, 
Who with swift vengeance do their foes confound, 
iVnd, slaue-like, drag them at prowd chariot-wheeles, 
Whilst miseries worse than death tread on their 

heeles : — 
So with great terror, state, and wonder, 
Heauen's Supreme Monarch — one hand griping 

thunder, 
The other stormes of hail, whirlwinds and fire — 
(Ensignes of his hot burning, quenchlesse ire,) 
When the world's building smothered lay in smoake, 
With sparkling eyes maiestically broke, 
Out of his pallace nere set ope before, 
And stood like a triumphant conqueror. 



christ''s coming to judgment. 171 

Trampling on death and hell. About him round, 
Like petty vizroyes, spirits methought all crownde, 
Show'd as if none but kings had bin his guard ; 
Whole hierarchies of saints were then preferd, 
With principalities, powers, and dominations, 
Thrones, angels, and archangels, all att once 
Filling the presence; then, like heauen-born 

twinnes, 
Flew fiery cherubins and seraphins ; 
Whilst the old patriarches, cloath'd all in white, 
Were rap'd with joy to see beames more bright 
About the prophets and the apostles runne, 
Than those whose flames were kindled at the sun. 
Martyrs, methought, with selfe same lustre shinde. 
As gold which seuen times was by fire refinde ; 
Virgins whose soules in life from lust liu'd cleare 
Had siluer robes, and on their heads did weare 
Coronets of diamonds. * * * « 
God's heire-apparent (here once made away) 
Triumphed in this his coronation-day. 
In which heauen was his kingdome, mercy his 

throne. 
Justice his scepter, a communion 
Of sanctified souls the courtly peeres. 
And his star-cliamber lords ; who now had yeeres 
Which neuer turn'd them gray by time's rough 

weather : 
Greatness was nowe no more called fortune's fether. 
Nor honour held a fruitlesse golden dreame. 
Nor riches a bewitching swallowing streame. 
Nor learning laughed at, as the begger's dower. 
Nor beauty's painted cheeke a summer-flower. 
No, no : hfe endlesse was, yet without loathing ; 
Honor and greatnesse wore immortal cloathing ; 
Riches were subiect to no base consuming. 
Learning burnt bright without contentious fuming; 



172 THOMAS DEKKER. 

Beauty no painting bought, but still renew'd : 
Each one had heere his full beatitude. 

That face whose picture might have ransomed 

kings, 
Yet put vp spettings, bafFulings, buffetings, — 
That head which could a crowne of starres haue 

worne, 
Yet spightfully was wrench'd with wreathes of 

thorne, — 
Those handes and feete where purest stamps were 

set, 
Yet naii'd vp like to pieces counterfet, — 
Those lippes, which though they had command ore 

all. 
Being thirsty, vinegar had to drinke and gall. 
That body scourg'd, and torne with many a wound, 
That his deere bloud, like balme, might leaue vs 

sound ; 
The well of life which with a speare being tride. 
Two streames mysterious gush'd out from his side : 
Messias, great Jehouah, God on hie. 
Yet hail'd King of the Jewes in mocker}'. 
The manger-cradled babe, the beggar borne, 
The poorest worme on earth, the heighthof scorne; 
That Lord by his own subiects crucified, 
So at his grand assize comes glorified. 
With troopes of angels, who his oflficers are, 
To call by sound of trumpe his foes to a bar. 
Thus stood he arm'd — justice his breastplate was, 
Judgement his helmet, stronger farre than brasse ; 
On his right arme truth's shield he did advance : 
And turnde his sharpned wrath into a lance ; 
Out of his mouth a two-edged sword did flie. 
To wound body and soule eternally : 
Armed cap-a-pe thus who gainst him durst fight ? 
There was no ground for strength, nor yet for flight. 



christ''s coming to judgment. 173 

At this methought all graues that ever held 
Dead coarses, yavvnd wide open, and compell'd 
The bones of dead men up with flesh to rise ; 
Yea, those on whom the seas did tyrannize. 
And drown'd in wrack.es, and which were peece- 

meal eaten, 
With liuely bodies to the shoares were beaten ; 
Whom sword or fire, jibbets or wheels had torne. 
Had their own limbes againe, and new vvere borne: 
From the first man God made to the last that died. 
The names of all were here examplified. 
EmprouT-s and kings, patriarches, and tribes for- 
gotten. 
The conquerors of the world — moldred and rotten — 
Lords, beggars, men and women, young and old, 
Vp at a bar set forth, their hands did hold. 
The Judge being set in open court, were layd 
Huge books, at sight of which were all dismaid, 
Would faine haue shrunck back, and fell downe 

with feare. 
In sheets of brasse all stories written were 
(Which those great volumes held) charactred deepe 
With pens of Steele, eternall files to keepe 
Of euery nation since the world began. 
And every deede, word, thought, of euery man. 
Sins hatched in caues, or such whose bawd was 

night, 
The minutes of the act were here set right ; 
Great men, whose secret damned sins vizards wore 
So close that none upon their browes could score 
The least black line — because none durst — had here 
A bill of items in particular. 
What their soules owed for sin to death and hell ; 
Or if it happened that they e'er did well. 
In these true journals it at large was found, 
And with rich promise of reward was crowned. 



XXVII. 
ANONYMOUS. 



STANZAS, 

From " The Passion of a Discontented Mind." 

From silent night, true register of moanes ; 
From saddest soule, consum'd with deepest 
sinnes ; 
From heart quite rent with sighs and heavy groanes, 
My waih'ng muse her wofull worke begins : 
And to the work! brings tunes of sad despaire, 
Sounding nought else but sorrow, griefe, and 
care. 

Sorrow, to see my sorrow's cause augmented. 

And yetlesse sorrowful!, were my sorrowes more : 

Griefe, that my griefe with griefe is not prevented. 

For griefe it is must ease my grieved sore : 

Thus griefe and sorrow cares but how to grieve, 

For griefe and sorrow must my cares relieve. 

Thou deepest Searcher of each secret thought I 

Infuse in me thy all-affecting grace ; 
So shall my works to good effects be brought. 
While I peruse my ugly sinnes a space; 

Whose staining filth so spotted hath my soule. 
As nought will waste, but teares of inward dole. 

that the learned poets of this time, 
Who in a love-sick line so well indite. 

Would not consume good wit in hatefull rime, 
But would with care some better subject write : 



STANZAS. 175 

For if their musicke please in eartlily thinf^s, 
Well would it sound it" strain'd with hcav'nly 
strings. 

But woe it is — to see fond worldlini»-s use, 

Who most delight in tilings that vainest be ; 
And without feare worke vertue's foul abuse, 
Scorning soule's rest, and all true piety : 
As if they made account never to part 
From this fraile life, the pilgrimage of smart. 

O why should man, that bears the stamp of heaven, 
So much abuse heaven's holy will and pleasure? 
Oh why was sense and reason to liim given, 
That in his sinne cannot containe a measure ? 
He knowes he must account for every sinne, 
And yetcommitteth sinnes that countless bin. 

tliat I were remov'de to some close cave, 
Where all alone, retired from delight, 

1 might my sighes and teares untroubled have, 

And never come in wretched worldlings sight, 
Whose ill bewitching company still brings 
Deepe provocation whence great danger 
springs. 



CONFESSION AND CONTRITION. 

From the Same. 

O CURSED custome, causing mischiefe still, 
Too long thy craft my sences hath misled ; 
Too long haue I beene slaue vnto thy will. 
Too long my soule on bitter sweetes haue fed : 
Now surfeiting with thy hell-poysned cates, 
Jn deepe repent, her former folly hates ; 

And humbly comes with sorrow-rented hart. 
With blubbred eyes and hands vprear'd to heauen. 



176 ANONYMOUS. 



To play a poore lamenting mawdline's part, 
That would weepe streams of bloud to be forgiuen ; 
But oh, I feare mine eyes are drain'd so drie, 
That though I would, yet now I cannot crie. 

If any eye therefore can spare a teare 
To fill the well-springs that must wet my cheekes, 
O let that eye to this sad feast draw neare ; 
Refuse me not, my humble soule beseekes; 
For all the teares mine eyes have euer wept 
Were now too little, had they all bin kept. 



XXVIII. 
THOMAS PEITOX. 



LINES, 

From " The Glasse of Time in (he First J//r." 

PARADISE. 

O Paradise, that first our parents stai'd, 
Vntill sucli time God's will they disobay'd, 
IJow tar my pen doth of thy worth come vnder, 
IVIirrour of eartli;, of all the world the wonder ! 
Where sacred Thetis from her louely lap 
Hath powerM her treasures, mucli inrich't thy hap, 
With Euphrates and Tigris hath combin'd, 
Their source diuided in foure parts, to winde 
About thy borders, as heauen's dearest worke, 
Within thy bowels glide along and lurke ; 
Venting such jewels as were neuer found — 
A welcome tribute to thy holy ground. 

Nature lier selfe hath much impal'd thy head, 
And wreath'd thy browes as fortune hath her led, 
With such a ridge of rocky mountaines small, 
To hemme thee in as with a sacred wall 
Vpon the top towards the east still stands 
A smokv hill, which sends forth fiery brands 
Of burning oyle from hei's infernall deepe, 
Much like the sword the tree of life did keepe. 

Deuinest land the sunne hath euer scene. 
How fortunate, thrice happy hast thou beene. 
To haue that God, whicli fram'd the world and all. 
Frequent thy walkes before thy fearefull tall ; 

[jAMKS I. POFTS.] 12 



178 THOMAS PEYTON. 

Yet as thou art and as thou dost remaine, 
The totall earth on euery side dost staine : 
Where can a man in all this world below 
Find bdeliurn, that pleasant tree, to grow, 
Whose fragrant branches, sweet delightfull fruite, 
And lofty height, hath made my sences mute ; 
The onix stone and other things to bide. 
In all the earth scarce in one place beside. 

How is thy ground exceeding rich and faire, 
A region seasoned with a temperate aire. 
Thy channels crawling full of golden ore. 
The fruitful'st soile that e'er the earth yet bore : 
Neptune himselfe with foure great riuers greeing 
To deck the bosome which gaue Adam being ; 
Vpon thy temples all their treasures pow'rd. 
And all their wealth at once vpon thee show'rd. 
After the floud, when all the world was kild 
In Noah's time, there man began to build, 
When hauing rambled in the sacred keele 
About the world, on euery side did feele 
Thy fragrant scent so pleasing, rich, and neate, 
Of all the earth to make thy throne their seate. 

Here was religion planted in her prime. 
The golden age and infancy of time. 
When man's worst actions like the turtle-doue 
In all the world was little else but loue : 
Deere Paradise, how famous was thy name, 
When God himselfe erected first thy frame, 
Endude thy land with such things it is set. 
As time for euer neuer can forget 1 

The fabling prayses of Elizium fields. 
The Turkes, Eutopia, nothing to it yeelds; 
The paradise of Rome's fantastike braine 
Is but a iest a little wealth to gaine ; 



PARADISE. 179 



And Aladenles, with his place of pleasure, 
Comes far behind, and still is short of measure, 
Worth honor, grace, when brought into com- 
pare, 
With this so rich and glorious garden rare. 
The Persian fancies of their heauenly land 
In sight of this not able is to stand; 
The world itselfe, and all that is therein, 
I could forsake that very place to win : 
And all the greatest kingdomes euer found 
But dung and trash to that most holy ground. 

The lofty walls were all of iasper built, 

Lin'd thick withgould, and couered rich with guilt, 

Like a quadrangle seated on a hill. 

With twelue braue gates the curious eye to fill, 

The sacred luster as the glistring zoane. 

And euery gate fram'd of a seuerall stone : 

On stately columes reared by that hand 

Which grand the world and all that in it stand ; 

The chalsedony and the iacinth pure, 

The emrald greene, which euer will endure, 

The sardonix, and purple amethist, 

The azurd burnish't saphire is not mist. 

The chrisolite, most glorious to behold, 

And tophaze stone, which shines as beaten gold. 

The chrisophrasus of admired worth, 

The sardius, berill seldome found on earth. 

The dores thereof, of siluer'd pearle most white, 

Do shew that none by wrong oppression might 

Be crost, by cunning, wringing, wrestling guile, 

By wicked plodding in all actions vile, 

By foule offences like base enuy faste. 

Can passe the dores but those are pure and chaste. 

That sweete disciple which the gospell wrate. 
And lent at supper (when Christ lesus sate) 

12— 2~ 



180 THOMAS PEYTON. 

Vpon the bosome of his Lord and King, 

He from the heauens this Paradise did bring, 

Perus'd the walls, and view'd, and view'd the same 

within, 
Describ'd it largely, all our loues to win. 
The chri stall river, with the tree of life, 
God's deerest Lamb, and sacred spouse, his wife, 
The various fruits that in the garden growes. 
And all things else which in aboundance flowes : 
Hath rapt my sence to thinke how God at first 
Fram'd all for Adam, and his ofspring curst. 



LINES, 

From " The Glasse of Time in the Second A^e." 

THE TRANSLATION OF ENOCH. 

God re-ascends, and lets the world alone, 
Takes Enoch vp, that liu'd therein to mone, 
Waile, grieve, lament, the abuses which he saw 
Committed were against the conscience, law 
Of noble nature, in that sinfull age ; 
Small hope to mend, when hope could not asswage 
The furious current of this streame and tide, 
Too good (sweete saint) with these foule men to bide. 

The angels bright, and all the powers diuine. 
Before thy face in glittring robes do shine. 
Their number more than are the stars and sands. 
With golden censors in their pure white hands, 
Winged with Fame to mount the highest heauens, 
Eanck't all in order, mustring iust by seauens. 
Descending sweetely on thy louely brest. 
To bring both soule and body to their rest. 



THE TRANSLATION OF ENOCH. 181 

By safe conueyance, in a charriot fram'cl 
Of burnisht gold, the horse with loue inflam'd, 
Mount vp the aire with stately stomack fierce, 
And at the last the brazen wall doth pierce ; 
Where like a prince that Paradise had gained, 
Of Eue and Adam thou art entertain'd, 
With farre more love within so braue a field, 
Then all the world and all therein can yeeld ; 
There thou dost Hue when they art wrapt in dust, 
The seuenth from them, tipe of our sabaoth iust. 



XXIX. 
JOHN DAVIES. 



STANZAS, 

From « The Triumph of Death.'"' 

London now smokes with vapors that arise 
From his foule sweat, himselfe he so bestirres : 

" Cast out your dead !" the carcase-carrier cries, 
Which he by heapes in groundlesse graves in- 
terres. — 

Now like to bees in summer's heate from hives, 
Out flie the citizens, some here, some there ; 

Some all alone, and others with their wives : 
With wives and children some flie, all for feare ! 

Here stands a watch, with guard of partizans, 
To stoppe their passages, or to or fro, 

As if they were not men, nor Christians, 

But fiends or monsters, murdering as they go. 

Each village, free, now stands upon her guard. 
None must have harbour in them but their owne ; 

And as for life and death all watch and ward. 
And flie for life (as death) the man unknowne ! 

Here crie the parents for their children's death. 
There howle the children for the parents' losse, 

And often die as they are drawing breatli 
To crie for their but now inflicted crosse. 

The last survivor of a familie 

Which yesterday, perhaps, were all in health, 
Now dies to beare his fellowes companie, 

And for a grave for all gives all their wealth. 



STANZAS. 183 

The London lanes (there})y themselves to save) 
Dill vomit out their imcligestetl dead, 

Who by cart-loads are carried to the grave ; 
For all these lanes with tblke were overfed. 

The king himselfe (O wretched times the while !) 
From place to place himselfe did flie, 

Which from himselfe himselfe did seek t' exile, 
Who (as amaz'd) not safe knew where to lie. 

For liardly could one man another meete 

That in his bosom brought not odious death ; 

It was confusion but a friend to greet, 

For, like a fiend, he banned with his breath. 

Now fall the people unto publike fast. 
And all assemble in the church to pray; 

Early and late their soules there take repast, 
As if preparing for a later day. 

The pastors now steep all their words in brine, 
With " woe, woe, woe," — and nought is heard 
but woe : 

"Woe and alas!" (they say) "the powers divine 
" Are bent mankind, for sinne, to overthrow ! 

"^ Repent, repent," (like Jonas, now they crie) 
" Ve men of England ! O repent, repent, 

To see if ye maie move pittie's eye 

To look upon you ere you quite be spent." 

And oft while he breathes out these bitter words. 
He drawing breath draws in more bitter bane ; 

For now the aire no aire, but death affords, 
And lights of art (for helpe) were in the wane. 

The ceremonie at their burialls 

Is " ashes but to ashes, dust to dust ;" 

Nav, not so much ; for strait the pitman falls 
(If lie can stand) to hide them as he niHst. 



184 JOHN DAVIES. 



But if the pitman have not so much sense 

To see nor feele which way the winde doth sit, 

To take the same, he hardly comes from tlience, 
But for himself, perhaps, he makes the pit. 

For look how leaves in autumn from the tree 
With wind do fall, whose heaps fill holes in 
ground ; 

So might ye with the plague's breath people see 
Fall by great heaps and fill up holes profound. 

No holy turf was left to hide the head 

Of holiest men ; but most unhallow'd grounds, 

Ditches, and highwaies, must receive the dead, 
The dead (ah, woe the while !) so o'er abound. 

Time never knew, since he begunne his houres, 
(For aught we reade) a plague so long remaine 

In any citie as this plague of ours ; 

For now six yeares in London it hath laine. 

But thou in whose high hand all hearts are held. 
Convert us, and from us this plague avert ; 

So sin shall yield to grace, and grace shall yield 
The giver glory for so dear desert. 

In few, what should I say ? the best are nought 
That breathe, since man first breathing did 
rebell : 
The best that breathe are worse than may be 
thought 
If thought can thinke, the best can do but well : 
For none doth well on earth but such as will 
Confesse, with griefe, they do exceeding ill. 



STANZAS. 185 

STANZAS, 

From " T/te Huh/ Roodc.'" 

To thee, my God, my Lord, my Jesus Christ, 

Will 1 ascribe all glory, povv'r and grace ; 
Thee will I serve, say pagans what they list. 
And with the arms of love thee still embrace ; 
That for my love in love dost deigne to die 
This death of shame, my life to glorifie. 

None other booke but thy unclasped side, 
Wherein 's contained all skills angelical; 
None other lesson but " Christ crucified," 
Will I ere learne : for that is all in all ; 
Wherein selfe curiositie may find 
Matter to please the most displeased mind. 

Here, by our Master's nakedness, we learne 

What weeds to weare: by his thorn-crowned head 
How to adorne us : and we may discerne 
By his most bitter gall how to be fed : 
How to revenge, by praying for liis foes; 
And lying on his crosse, how to repose, 

O work without example ! and O grace 

Without deserving ! Love, O jargest love, 
Surmounting measure, that for wormes so base, 
And basely bad, such hels of woes doth prove ! 
Had we been friends what would he then have 

done, 
That, being his foes, no woes for us doth shun ? 



XXX. 
PHINEAS FLETCHER. 



THE PURPLE ISLAND. 

CANTO XI. 

The early morn lets out the peeping day, 

And strewed his path with golden marygolds ; 
The moon grows wanne, and starres flie all away, 
Whom Lucifer locks up in wonted folds. 

Till light is quencht, and heav'n in seas hath 
flung 

The headlong day : to tli' hill the shepherd's 
throng, 
And Thirsil now began to end his task and song. 
Who now, alas ! shall teach my humble vein, 

That never yet durst peep from covert glade ; 
But softly learnt for fear to sigh and plain, 
And vent his griefs to silent myrtils' shade ? 
Wlio now shall teach to change my oaten 

quill 
For trumpets' 'larms, or humble verses fill 
With gracefuU majestic, and loftie rising skill ? 

Ah, thou dread spirit ! shed thy holy fire. 
Thy holy frame into my frozen heart ; 
Teach thou my creeping measures to aspire, 
And swell in bigger notes and higher art : 
Teach my low muse thy fierce alarums to ring, 
And raise my soft strain to high thundeiing : 
Tune thou my loftie song; thy battels must 1 sing: 
Such as thou wert within the sacred breast 
Of that thrice famous poet, shepherd, king. 



THE PURPLE ISLAND. 187 

And taiight'st his heart to frame his cantos best 
Of all that e*er thy glorious work did sing : 
Or as those holy fishers once amongs 
Thou flamedst bright with sparkling parted 
tongues ; 
And brought'st down heav'n and earth in those 
all-conqu'ring songs. 

These mighty heroes, fill'd with justest rage 

To be in narrow walls so slosely pent, 
Glitt'ring in arms and goodly equipage, 
Stood at the castle's gate, now ready bent 
To sally out, and meet the enemie : 
A hot disdain sparkled in every eye, 
Breathing out hatefull warre and deadly enmitie. 

Thither repairs the careful Intellect, 

With his fair spouse Voletta, heav'nly fair : 
With both, their daughter ; whose divine aspect, 
Though now sad damps of sorrow much em- 
pair, 
Yet through those clouds did shine so glorious 

bright, 
That every eye did homage to the sight, 
Yeelding their captive hearts to that commanding 
light. 

But who may hope to paint such majestic. 

Or shadow well such beautie, such a face — 
Such beauteous face, unseen to mortall eye? 
Whose powerful looks and more than mortall 
grace 
Love's self hath lov'd, leaving his heav'nly 

throne, 
With amorous sighs and many a loving moan 
(W hom all the world would woo) woo'd her his only 
one. 



188 PHINEAS FLETCHER. 

Farre be that boklnesse from thy humble swain, 

Fairest Eclecta, to describe thy beautie, 
And with unable skill thy glory stain, 

Which ever he admires with humble dutie ; 
But who to view such blaze of beauty longs 
Go he to Sinai, th' holy groues amongs. 
Where that wise shepherd chants her in his Song 
of Songs. 

The island's king with sober countenance 

Aggrates the kni ghts, who thus his right defended ; 
And with grave speech and comely amenance, 
Himself, his state, his spouse, to them com- 
mended : 
His lovely childe that by him pensive stands 
He last delivers to their valiant hands ; 
And her to thank the knights, her champions, he 
commands. 

The God-like maid awhile all silent stood, 

And down to th* earth let fall her humble eyes ; 
While modest thoughts shot up the flaming bloud, 
Which fir'd her scarlet cheek with rosie dies ; 
But soon to quench the heat, that lordling 

reignes. 
From her faire eye a show'r of crystall rains, 
Which with its silver streams o'er-runs the beaute- 
ous plains: 

As when the sunne in midst of summer's heat 

Draws up thinne vapours with his potent ray, 
Forcing dull waters from their native seat ; 

At length dimme clouds shadow the burning day: 
Till coldest aire, soon melted into showers. 
Upon the earth his welcome anger powres, 
And heav'n's clear forelieade now wipes off her 
former lovvres. 



THE PURPLE ISLAND. 189 

At length, a little lifting up her eyes, 

A renting sigh way for her sorrow brake, 
Which from her heart 'gan in her face to rise ; 
And first in th* eye, then in the lip, thus spake; 
"Ah gentle knights, how many a simple maid. 
With justest grief, and wrong so ill apaid, 
Give due reward for such your pains and friendly 
aid ? 

" But if my princely spouse do not delay 

His timely presence in my greatest need. 
He will for me your friendly love repay. 
And well requite this your so gentle deed : 
Then let no fear your mighty hearts assail : 
His word's himself; himself he cannot fail. 
Long may he stay, yet sure he comes, and must 
prevail." 

By this the long shut gate was open laid ; 

Soon out they rush in order well arranged : 
And fastning in their eyes that heav'nly maid. 
How oft for fear her fairest colour chang'd ! 
Her looks, her worth, her goodly grace and 

state. 
Comparing with her present wretched fate, 
Pitie whets just revenge, and love's fires kindle hate. 

Long at the gate the thoughtful Intellect 

Staid with his fearfull queen and daughter fair ; 

But when the knights were past their dimme aspect, 

They follow them with vowes and many a prayer : 

At last they climbe up to the castle's height, 

From which they viewed the deeds of every 

knight. 

And mark'd the doubtfull end of this intestine fight. 

As when a youth bound for the Belgick warre. 
Takes leave of friends upon the Kentish shore ; 



190 PHINEAS FLETCHER. 

Now are they parted, and he sail'd so farre 

They see not now, and now are seen no more : 
Yet farre off viewing the white trembling sails, 
The tender mother soon plucks off her vails, 

And shaking them aloft, mito her sonne she hails. 

Mean time these champions march in fit array, 
Till both the armies now were come in sight : 
Awhile each other boldly viewing stay. 

With short delaye whetting fierce rage and 
spight. 
Sound now ye trumpets, sound alarums loud ; 
Hark, how their clamours whet their anger 
proud : 
See, yonder are they met in midst of dustie cloud ! 

So oft the south with civil enmitie 

Musters his watrie forces 'gainst the west ; 
The rolling clouds come tumbhng up the skie, 
In dark folds wrapping up their angry guest : 
At length the flame breaks from th' imprison- 
ing cold. 
With horrid noise tearing the limber muld. 
While down in liquid tears the broken vapours 
roird. 

First did that warlike maid herself advance ; 

And riding from amidst her companie. 
About her helmet wav'd her mighty lance, 
Daring to fight the proudest enemie : 
Porneios soon his ready spear addrest. 
And close advancing on his hastie beast, 
Bent his sharp-headed lance against her dainty 
breast. 

In vain the broken staffe sought entrance there. 
Where Love himself oft entrance sought in vain : 



THE PURPLE ISLAND. 191 

But much unlike the martial virgin's spear, 
Which low dismounts her foe on dustie plain, 
Broaching with bloudy point his breast before : 
Down from the wound trickled the bubbling 
gore, 
And bid pale Death come in at that red gaping 
door. 

There lies he covered now in lowly dust, 

And foully wallowing in clutter'd bloud, 
Breathing togetlier out his life and lust, 

Which fi'om his breast swamme in the steaming 
floud : 
In maids his joy, now by a maid defi'd, 
His life he lost and all his former pride; 
With women would he live, now by a woman di'd. 

Aselges, struck with such a heavie sight, 

Greedy to venge his brotlier's sad decay, 
Spurr'd forth his flying steed with fell despite. 
And met the virgin in the middle way : 

His spear against her head he fiercely threw. 
Which to that face performing homage due. 
Kissing her helmet, thence in thousand shivers flew. 

The wanton boy had dreamt, that latest night. 

He well had learnt the liquid aire dispart, 
And swimme along the heav'ns with pineons light ; 
Now that fair maid taught him this nimble art: 
For from his saddle far away she sent. 
Flying along the emptie element, 
That hardly yet he knew whither his course was 
bent. 

The rest that saw with fear the ill successe 
Of single fight, durst not like fortune trie ; 

But round beset her with their numerous presse ; 
Before, beside, behind, they on her flie. 



192 PHINEAS FLETCHER. 

And every part with coward odds assail : 
But she redoubling strokes as thick as hail, 
Drove far their flying troops, and thresh'd with 
iron flail : 

As when a gentle greyhound set around 

With little curres, which dare his way molest, 
Snapping beliinde; soon as the angrie hound 
Turning his course, hath caught the busiest, 
And shaking in his fangs hath welnigh slain ; 
The rest, fear'd with his crying, runne amain. 
And standing all aloof, whine, houl, and bark in 
vain. 

The subtil Dragon that from far did view 

The waste and spoil made by this maiden knight. 
Fell to his wonted guile ; for well he knew 

All force was vain against such wondrous might : 

A craftie swain well taught to cunning harms, 

Caird False Delight, he chang'd with hellish 

charms, 

That True Delight he seem'd the self-same shape 

and arms. 

The watchfull'st sight no difl'erence could descrie ; 
The same his face, his voice, his sail the same : 
Thereto his words he feign'd; and coming nigh 
The maid, that fierce pursues her martial game. 
He whets her wrath with many a guilefull 

word. 
Till she less careful), did fit time afford : 
Then up with both his hands he lifts his balefull 
sword. 

Ye pow'rful heav'ns I and thou, their Governour ! 

With what eyes can you view this dolefull sight ? 
How can you see your fairest conquerour 

So nigh her end by so unmanly slight ? 



THE PURPLE ISLAND. 193 

The dreadful weapon through the aire doth 

ghde; 
But sure you turn'd the harmfull edge aside : 
Else must slie there liave fall'ji, and by that tratour 
died. 

Yet in her side deep was the wound impight; 
Her flowing life the shining armour stains : 
From that wide spring long rivers took their flight, 
With purple streams drowning the silver plains: 
Her cheerfull colour now grows wanne and 

pale, 
Which oft she strives with courage to recall. 
And rouze her fainting head, which down as oft 
would fall : 

All so a lilie prest with heavie rain, 

Which fills her cups with show'rs up to the brinks; 
The wearie stalk no longer can sustain 

The head, but low beneath the burden sinks : 
Or, as a virgin-rose her leaves displayes, 
Which too hot scorching beams quite disarayes, 
Down flags her double rufie, and all her sweet 
decayes. 

Th' undaunted maid, feeling her feet denie 

Their wonted dutie, to a tree retir'd ; 
Whom all the rout pursue with deadly crie : 
As when a hunted stag, now welnigh tir'd, 
Shor'd by an oak, 'gins with his head to play ; 
The fearfull hounds dare not his horns assay, 
But running round about, with yelping voices bay. 

And now perceiving all her strength was spent. 
Lifting to list'ning heav'n her trembling eyes, 

Thus whispering soft, her soul to heav'n she sent ; 
''Thou Chastest Love! that rul'st the wand'ring 
skies, 

[jAMKS I. rons.] 13 



194 PHINEAS FLETCHER. 

More pure than purest heavens by thee mov'd ; 

If thine own love in me thou sure hast prov'd ; 

If ever thou myself, my vows, my love hast lov'd ; 

" Let not this temple of thy spotlesse love 

Be with foul hand and beastly rage defil'd ; 
But when my spirit shall its camp remove, 
And to his home return, too long exil'd, 
Do thou protect it from the ravenous spoil 
Of ranc'rous enemies, that hourely toil 
Thy humble votarie with lothsome spot to foil." 

With this few drops fell from her fainting eyes 

To dew the fading roses of her cheek ; 
That much High Love seem'd passion'd with those 
cries ; 
Much more those streams his heart and patience 
break : 
Straight he the charge gives to a winged swain, 
Quickly to step down to that bloody plain. 
And aid her wearie arms, and rightful cause main- 
tain. 

Soon stoops the speedie herauld through the aire. 

Where chaste Agneia and Encrates fought : 
" See, see !" he cries, ^' where your Parthenia fair, 
The flow'r of all your armie, hemm'd about 
With thousand enemies, now fainting stands, 
Readie to fall into their murd'ring hands : 
Hie ye, ho, hie ye fast ! the Highest Love com- 
mands." 

They casting round about their angrie eye. 
The wounded virgin almost sinking spi'd ; 

They prick their steeds, which straight like light- 
ning flie : 
Their brother Continence runnes by their side ; 



THE PURPLE ISLAND. 195 

Fair Continence, that truly long before, 
As his heart's leige, this ladie did adore : 
And now his faithful love kindled his hate the 
more. 

Encrates and his spouse with slashing sword 

Assail'd the scatter'd troops that headlong flie ; 
While Continence a precious liquour pour'd 
Into the wound, and suppled tenderly : 
Then binding up the gaping orifice, 
Reviv'd the spirits, that now she 'gan to rise, 
And with new life confront her heartlesse enemieg. 

So have I often seen a purple flow'r 

Fainting through heat, hang down her drooping 
head, 
But soon refreshed with a welcome show'r, 
Begins again her lively beauties spread. 

And with new pride her silken leaves dis- 
play ; 
And while the sunne doth now more gently 
play, 
Lays out her swelling bosom e to the smiling day. 

Now rush they all into the flying trains, 

Bloud fires their bloud, and slaughter kindles 
fight; 
The wretched vulgar on the purple plains 
Fall down as thick as when a rustick wight 
From laden oaks the plenteous akorns poures ; 
Or when the thicken'd ayer that sadly lowers, 
And melts his sullen brow, and weeps sweet April 
show'rs. 

The greedy Dragon, that aloof did spie 
So ill successe of this renewed fray, 

More vex'd with losse of certain victorie, 
Depriv'd of so assur'd and wished prey, 

— - 



196 PHINEAS FLETCHER. 

Gnashed his iron teeth for grief and spite : 
The burning sparks leap from his flaming 

sight,^ 
And from his smoking javves streams out a 

smoukl'ring niglit. 

Straight thither sends he in a fresh supply, 

The swelling band that drunken Methos led ; 
And all the rout his brother Gluttonie 

Commands, in lavvlesse bands disordered. 
So now they bold restore their broken fight, 
And fiercely turn again from shamefuU flight; 
While both with former losse sharpen their raging 
spite. 

Freshly these knights assault these fresher bands. 
And with new battell all their strength renew : 
Down fell Geloios by Encrates' hands; 
Agneia, Moechus and Anagnus slew ; 
And spying Methos fenct in's iron vine, 
Pierct his swollen panch : there lies the 
grunting swine, 
And spues his liquid soul out in his purple wine. 

As when a greedy lion long unfed. 

Breaks in at length into the harmless folds, 
(So hungry rage commands) with fearful dread 
He drags the silly beasts; nothing controles 
The victor proud; he spoils, devours, and tears: 
In vain the keeper calls his shepherd peers : 
Mean while the simple flock gaze on with silent 
fears : 

Such was the slaughter these three champions made; 

But most Encrates, whose unconquer'd hands 
Sent thousand foes down to th' infernall shade. 

With uselesse limbes strewing the bloudie sands: 



THE PURPLE ISLAND. 197 

Oft were tliey succour'd fresh with new sup- 
plies, 
But fell as oft : — the Dragon, grown more wise 
By former losse, began anotlier way devise. 

Soon to their aid the Cyprian band he sent. 
For easy skirmish clad in armour light : 
Their gohlen bowes in hand stood ready bent, 
And painted quivers furnisht well for fight 
Stuck full of shafts, whose heads foul poison 

stains ; 
Which dipy/d in Phlegethon bv hellish swains, 
Bring thousand painfull deaths, and thousand 
deadly pains. 

Thereto of substance strong, so thinne and slight, 

And wrouglit by subtil hand so cunningly. 
That hardly were discern'd by weaker sight ; 
Sooner the heart did feel, then eye could see : 
Farre off they stood, and flung their darts 

around. 
Raining whole clouds of arrows on the ground ; 
So safely others hurt, and never wounded, wound. 

Much were the knights encumbred with these foes ; 

For well they saw, and felt their enemies : 
But when they back would turn their borrow'd 
blows. 
The light foot troop away more swiftly flies 
Than do their winged arrows through the 

winde : 
And in their course oft would they tume 
behinde. 
And with their glancing darts their hot pursuers 
blinde. 

As when by Russian Volgha's frozen banks, 
The false back Tartars, fear, with cunning feigne, 



198 PHINEAS FLETCHER. 

And posting fast away in flying ranks, 

Oft backward turn, and from their bowes down 
rain 
Whole storms of darts ; so do they flying fight : 
And what by force they lose, they win by 
slight ; 
Conquer'd by standing out, and conquerors by 
flight. 

Such was the craft of this false Cyprian crew : 

Yet oft they seem'd to slack their fearful pace, 
And yield themselves to foes that fast pursue ; 
So would they deeper wound in nearer space : 
In such a fight he wins who fastest flies. 
Fly, fly, chaste knights, such subtil enemies : 
The vanquish'd cannot live, and conqueror surely 
dies. 

The knights, oppres'd with wounds and travel past, 
Did soon retire, and now were near to fainting : 
With that a winged post him speeded fast, 

The General with these heavy news acquainting : 
He soon refreshed their hearts that'gan to tire. 
But, let our weary Muse awhile respire : 
Shade we our scorched heads from Phoebus' parch- 
ing fire. 



XXXI. 
WILLIAM HALL. 



MAN'S GREAT ENEMY. 

Sathan did tempt our parents first of all, 
And the forbidden fruite caus'd them to eate, 
Eating this fruite it broughts all into thrall ; 
Our misery no tongue can halfe repeate : 
Deceiuer-like, hee said, Yee shall not dye, 
To which they condescended willingly, 

And eate the fruite forbidden of the Lord : 
Hee first vnto the woman did it giue, 
Shee to her husband; thus with one accord 
Both sure of death, though promised to Hue : 
By his inticements hee them both allured, 
By which he them eternall woe procured. 

Against the feebler sex his rage is shown e ; 

The woman he did first of all attempt ; 

Thus his deceit was at the first made knowne ; 

Yet from seducing he would not exempt, 
Nor free himself, but, like an old deceiuer, 
Of soule and bodie's good hee's a bereauer. 

Hee's alwayes ready for to lay his baites, 
To catch all silly soules, and to insnare 
Them in his subtil and deceiuing slight ; 
For to withstand him then we must prepare; 

We cannot him resist doe what we can ; 

Help vs, Lorde, for vaine is the helpe of man. 



XXXII. 
RACHEL SPEGHT. 



THE FRAILTY OF LIFE. 

Man is in sacred writ compar'd to grasse, 
Which flourishing to-day sends forth its flowre, 
With'ring at night is cast into the fire ; 
Of short persistance, like an Aprill showre; 
For who so now perceiues the sunne to shine, 
His life is done before that his dechne. 

Our dayes consume and passe away like smoake ; 
Like thornes, soon kindled, soon extinct; 
Or like a ship that swiftly slides the sea ; 
Vncertaine, fickle, irksome, and succinct, 
Recite I all the fading types 1 can, 
Yet none so momentarie as is man. 

Vnto a shadow lob doth life compare, 
Which when the bodie moues doth vanish quite ; 
To vanitie, and likewise to a dreame, 
Whereof we haue an hundred in one night. 
Dauid's resembling life vnto a span, 
Doth shew the short continuance of man. 

If happinesse consist in length of dayes. 
An oke more happie than a man appeares ; 
So doth the elephant and sturdie stagge, 
Which commonly doe liue two hundred yeares ; 
But mortall man, as Moses doth vnfould. 
If he liue fourscore yeares is counted old. 

When Xerxes with ten hundred thousand men 
Attempted warre, his eyes did showre forth teares 



THE FRAILTY OP LIFE. 201 



To thinke, not one of those vvliome he imploy'd 
Should be aliue within one hundred yeares ; 
For Adam's heyres ingaged doe remaine 
To pay what he receiued and lost againe. 

The day wherein we first beliekl the light 
Begins our death, for hfe doth daily fade : 
Our day of death begins our happie life; 
We are in danger till our debt is paid. 
Life is but lent, we owe it to the Lord; 
When 'tis demanded it must be restor d. 



XXXIIL 
SIMON WASTILL. 



COLOSSIANS. 

All saints by Christ, who all things made, 

From darkness are set free ; 
What sufferings want I do fulfil, 

His grace doth worke in me. 

Be constant: legall rites and workes, 

With precepts eke of men. 
Since Christ, doe nothing helpe our soules; 

Hate ceremonies then. 

Christ seeke aboue, and put him on, 

Your members mortifie ; 
Man, wife, son, seruant, here may learne 

What vice to shun and flye. 
Deale well with seruants, watch and pray : 

Let words be full of grace ; 
Walke wisely toward those without, 

Salute these in their place. 



XXXIV. 
ROBERT AYLETT . 



STANZAS, 

From ^^ Peace with her Faire Gardens." 

O King of Peace ! grant me this inward peace, 
'Tis that for which tiie spirit alwayes prays, 
That peace which brings all graces sweet increase, 
And now thou art to heau'n gone, with vs stays. 

This peace hell, death, nor tyrant's rage, dismays. 
Tis not peace as world to vs doth giue ; 
In comforts she transcends sunne's gentlest rays ; 
By her when wee in life of grace haue thriue. 
With her we euer shall in glory line. 

This is the peace which sets our hearts as sure 
As Sion's mount, which no force can remoue ; 
This peace it is which euer shall endure, 
If rooted in our hearts by faith and loue. 

This peace which first descends from heauen 
aboue. 
And doth our troubled consciences still ; 
Which makes the members like the head to proue ; 
This is the peace of God the which doth fill 
Both heau'n and earth with peace, and all men 
with good vvill. 

Now neuer let my soule enioy true peace, 
If now she doth not more my heart delight 
Then all the pleasures, glory, wealth, and ease, 
Which heere men's mindes to vanity inuite. 



STANZAS. 203 



God of all peace, which hast me giu'n a sight 
Of this most rich inualewable treasure, 
Grant I on peace may set my whole delight, 
True peace, like loue, which hath no bounds nor 

measure ; 
In this I ly dovvne safe, and take my rest and 
pleasure. 



XXXV. 

AUGUSTINE TAYLOR. 



CHRIST'S MERCY. 

I ROSE more earely to prepare thy way, 

For I saw sun-rise before he saw day : 

I'll bring thee home, adorn'd with better things, 

The power and honor of all earthly kings ; 

And, let their powers together lincked bee. 

All cannot make one worthy t' waite on thee. 

I spent my dayes in sorrow for thy good, 

I sayl'd to th' cradle in teares, to the graue in blood ; 

And more than this I was content to doo. 

My middle time had mickle sorrowes too ; 

I liu'd releeuing poore, healing and feeding, 

I wipt those eyes that wept, wounds that were 

bleeding ; 
I cur'd and cur'd for all that were in woe ; 
None can complaine that they away did goe 
Without a pardon for the greatest transgression ; 
All those that brought repentance found compassion. 
I haue been thine, thine both in word and deede ; 
My tongue did preach and pray, my flesh did bleede ; 
From my fresh wounds the smallest drop that fell 
Is price sufficient to sane Israeli. 



XXXVI. 
ANONYMOUS. 



STANZAS, 

From " Machiauers Dogge." 

Chide sinners as the father cloth his childe, 
And keepe them in the awe of louing feare ; 
Make sinne most hatefull, but in words be nice, 
That humble patience may the better heare, 
And wounded conscience may receyue rehefe, 
When true repentance pleads the sinner's griefe. 
Throw not the sinner headlong to damnation, 
Nor fright the faithfull with a cursed feare, 
But winne repentance vnto reformation, 
And teach the christian how his ccosse to beare. 
Give comfort in thy cares, instruction 
To saue the faithfull from the soule's destruction. 

Heale the infect of sinne with oyle of grace, 
And wash the soule with true contrition's teares. 
And when confession shewes her heauy case 
Deliuer fayth from all infernal feares ; 
That when high justice threatens sinne with death, 
Mercy againe may giue repentance breath. 

Yet flatter not the fowle dehght of sinne. 
But make it loathsome in the eye of loue, 
And seeke the heart with holy cares to winne. 
To work the best way for the soule's behoue : 
So teach, so liue, that both in word and deed 
The world may ioy thy heauenly rules to read. 



XXXVII. 
W. PARKES. 



LINES, 

From " The Curtain-drawer of the World." 

Would I disclose the secrets I have seene 
In closets, chambers, bosomes, I haue bene, * 
And here set downe what erst I haue neglected, 
How minds of men and women are affected ; 
Then should 1 write of some so strangely base, 
Beares diuil's breast, that weares an angel's face ; 
The subtill hammer of whose forge within, 
Thatworkes black mischief, shewesnot out sinne. 
Here's Vulcan vowing in his grymy breast 
His wines and honour shall inrich his chest. 
Of some whose meditation is their care, 
To father on long dales deceittful ware. 
Heere dwels a merchant that hath store of wealth, 
A faire young wife, that wants as he wants health: 
Within whose breast I see contriu'd and plotted 
That which for fatal] husband is alotted : 
Which though enacted twenty times a day, 
The tongue conceales, the face doth not betray. 
W^ithin some breasts and bosomes I haue gone 
Conscience I find more harder than a stone ; 
In other some, whose number is not small, 
A little remnant : in some none at all. 
Heere's one whose conscience beareth ludas' curse, 
'I hat vowes damnation, but hee'll fill the purse. 
A wayting mistresse that is poore and proud 
Will do what virtue neuer yet alovv'd ; 
For silken trappings and for golden pay 
Turnes whoore to-morrow, is resolu'd to-day. 



206 W. PARKES. 



An antient thefe of twenty yeares and more, 
Hath vovv'd from day to day to steale no more : 
Yet now to make his broken summe vp iust 
Will uenture once more, and be hang'd, I trust. 
Should I go forward through a world of mind, 
Kiss euery breast and bosome ill inclin'd, 
And shew the purpose therein was intended, 
My booke would still draw leaues, not heere be 
ended. 



XXXVIII. 
GEORGE WITHER. 



THE LAMENTATION OF DAVID OVER SAUL 
AND JONATHAN HIS SON. 

Thy beauty, Israel, is gone : 
Slaine in the places high is he. 
The mighty now are ouerthrovvne I 
Oh ! thus how commeth it to be ? 

Let not this newes their streets throughout 
In Oath or Askalon be told ; 
For fear Philistia's daughters flout, 
Lest vaunt the vncircumcized should. 

On you hereafter let no dewe, 

You mountaines of Gilboa, fall : 

Let there be neither showers on you, 

Nor fields that breed an offering shall; 

For there with shame away was throwne 
The target of the strong, alas ! 
The shield of Saul, euen as of one 
That neu'r with oile anoynted was. 

Nor from their blood that slaughter'd lay. 
Nor from the fatt of strong men slaine, 
Came Jonathan his bow away. 
Nor drew forth Saul his sword in vaine ; 

In hfe time they were louely faire. 
In death they undiuided ayre; 
More swift than eagles of the air. 
And stronger they than lions were. 



208 GEORGE WITHER. 

Weepe, Israel's daughters I weepe for Saul, 
Who you with skarlet hath aray'd, 
Who clothed you witli pleasures all, 
And on your garments gold hath layd. 

How comes it he that mighty was 
The foyle in battell doth sustaine ? 
Thou Jonathan ! oh, thou, alas ! 
Upon thy places high wert slaine. 

And much distressed is my heart, 
My brother Jonathan, for thee; 
My very deare delight thou wert. 
And wondrous was thy loue to me: 

So wondrous it surpassed farre 
The love of women eu'ry way. 
Oh ! how the mighty fallen are ! 
How warlike instruments decay. 



THE CONVERSION OF ST. PAUL. 

A BLEST conuersion and a strange 
Was that, when Saul a Paul became ; 
And, Lord, for making such a change 
We praise and glorifie thy name; 

For whil'st he went from place to place 
To persecute tiiy truth and thee, 
And running to perdition was. 
By powerful grace cal'd backe was hee. 

When from thy truth we goe astray, 
Or wrong it through our pointed zeale, 
Oh, come and stop vs in the way. 
And then thy will to vs reveale. 



THE CONVERSION OF ST. PAUL. 209 

That briglitnesse show vs from above, 
Which proues the sensuall eyesight bhnde ; 
And from our eyes those scales remoue 
That hinder vs thy way to finde. 

And as thy blessed servant Paul, 
When he a conuert once became, 
Exceedetl thy apostles all 
In painefull preacliing of thy name; 

So grant tliat those who haue in sinne 
Exceeded others heretofore, 
The start of them in faith may winne — 
Loue, serue, and honour thee the more. 



ST. PETER'S DAY. 

How watchful neede we to become. 

And how devoutly pray, 
That thee, O Lord, we fall not from, 

Upon our try all day ! 
For if thy great apostle said 

He would not thee denie. 
Whom he that very night denayd, 

On what shall we relie ? 
For of ourselues we cannot leaue 

One pleasure for thy sake ; 
No, nor one vertuous thought conceiue, 

Till vs thou able make : 
Nay, we not onely thee denie. 

When persecutions be. 
But or forget, or from thee flie, 

When peace attends on thee. 

O let those prayers vs auail, 
Thou didst for Peter daigne, 

[jAMES I. POETS.] 14 



210 GEORGE WITHER. 

That when our foe shall us assaile 

His labour may be vaine ! 
Yea, cast on vs those powerful eyes, 

That mou'd him to lament ; 
We may bemoane with bitter cries 

Our follies, and repent. 

And grant that such as him succeed 

For pastors of thy fold, 
Thy sheepe and lambes may guide and feede, 

As thou appoint'st they should ; 
By his example speaking what 

They out in truth to say, 
And in their lives confirming that 

They teach them to obey. 



THE PRAYER OF HABAKUK. 

Habak. iii. 

Lord, thy answer I did heare, 
And I grew therewith afear'd ; 
When the times at fullest are, 
Let thy work be then declar'd : 

When the time. Lord, full doth grow, 

Then in anger mercy shew. 

God Almightie, he came downe, 
Downe he came from Theman-ward ; 
And the matchlesse Holy One 
From mount Paran forth appear*d ; 
Heaven o'erspreading with his rayes, 
And earth filling with his praise. 

Sunne-like was his glorious light; 
From his side there did appeare 
Beaming rayes that shined bright, 
And his pow'r he showed there; 



THE PRAYER OP HABAKKQK. 211 

Plagues before his face he sent : 
At his feete hot coales there went. 

Where he stood he measure tooke 
Of the earth, and view'd it well ; 
Nations vanisht at his looke, 
Auncient hils to powder fell ; 

Muuntaines old cast lower were ; 

For his waies eternal are. 

Cushan tents I saw diseas'd, 
And the Midian curtaines quake. 
Have the flouds, Lord, thee displeased ? 
Did the flouds thee angry make ? 

Was it else the sea that hath 

Thus prouoked thee to wrath ? 

For thou rod'st thy horses there, 
And thy saving charrets through ; 
Thou didst make thy bow appeare, 
And thou didst perform e thy vowe ; 

Yea, thine oath and promise past, 

To the tribes fulfilled hast. 

Through the earth thou riftes didst make, 

And the riuers there did flow; 

Mountaines seeing thee did shake, 

And away the flouds did goe. 

From the deepe a voyce was heard, 
And his hands on high he rear'd. 

Both the sunne and moone made stay, 

And remou'd not in their spheares; 

By thine arrowes' light went they, 

By thy brightly shining speares: 
Thou in wrath the lands did crush. 
And in rage the nations thresh. 

For thy people's safe releefe, 

With thy Christ for ayd went'st thou ; 

14—2 



212 GEORGE WITHER. 

Thou hast also peirct their chiefe 
Of the sinful! household through, 
And display'd them till made bare 
From tlie foote to necke they were. 

Thou, with jauelines of their owne, 
Didst their armies' leader strike ; 
For against me they came downe, 
To deuoure me wherllwinde-like ; 
And they ioy in nothing more 
Than vnseene to spoile the poore. 

Through the sea thou mad'st a way, 
And didst ride thy horses there, 
Where great heapes of water lay ; 
I the nevves thereof did heare, 

And the voyce my bowels shooke ; 

Yea, my lips a quiv'ring tooke. 

Bottennesse my bones possest. 
Trembling feare possessed me, 
I that troublous day might rest; 
For when -his approches be 
Onward to the people made, 
His strong troups will them invade. 

Bloomlesse shall the fig-tree bee, 
And the vine no fruit shall yeeld ; 
Fade shall then the oliue-tree, 
Meat shall none be in the field ; 
Neither in the fold or stall 
Flock or heard continue shall. 

Yet the Lord my ioy shall be, 
And in him I will delight. 
In my God that saueth me, 
God the Lord my only might ; 
Who my feet so guides, that I, 
Hinde-hke, pace my places high. 



FOR SEASONABLE WEATHER. 213 



FOR SEASONABLE WEATHER. 

LordI should the sunne, the clovvds, the winde. 

The ayre and seasons be 
To vs so frovvard unkind, 

As we are false to thee. 
All fruites would quite away be burn'd, 

Or lye in water drovvn'd, 
Or blasted be, or ouerturn'd, 

Or chilled on the ground. 

But from our duty though we swarue, 

Thou still dost mercy shew, 
And daign thy creatures to preserue, 

That men might thankfuU grow; 
Yet though from day to day we sinne, 

And thy displeasure gaine, 
No sooner we to cry beginne, 

But pitty we obtaine. 

The weather now thou changed hast 

That put vs late to feare, 
And when our hopes were almost past, 

Then comfort did appeare ; 
The heauen the earth's complaints hath heard, 

They reconciled be, 
And thou such weather hast prepared 

As we desired of thee. 

For which, with lifted hands and eyes, 

To thee we doe repay 
The due and willing sacrifice 

Of giving thanks to-day ; 
Because such offrings we should not 

To render thee be slowe. 
Nor let thy mercie be forgot, 

Which thou art pleased to showe. 



214 



GEORGE WITHER. 



SONNET. 

Philarete. 

Now that my body, dead aliue, 

Bereau'd of comfort, lies in thrall, 

Doe thou, my soul, begin to thriue. 

And vnto honie turne this gall; 

So shall we both, through outward wo, 
The way to inward comfort know. 

For as that foode my flesh I giue 
Doth keepe in me this mortall breath ; 
So souls on meditations Hue, 
And shunne thereby immortall death : 

Nor art thou euer neerer rest 

Than when thou find'st me most opprest. 

First thinke, my soule, if I haue foes 

That take a pleasure in my care, 

And to procure these outward woes, 

Haue thus en wrapt me vnaware, 

Thou should'st by much more careful! bee, 
Since greater foes lay waite for thee. 

Then when mew'd vp in grates of Steele, 
Minding those ioyes mine eyes do misse, 
Thou find'st no torment thou dost feele 
So grieuous as privation is ; 

Muse how the damn'd in flames that glow 
Pine in the loss of bliss they know. 

Thou seest there's giuen so great might 

To some that are but clay as I, 

Their very anger can afiright; 

Which if in any thou espie, 

Thus thinke : if mortal's frownes strike feare, 
How dreadfuU will God's wrath appeare ! 



SONNET. 215 



By my late hopes, than none are crost, 

Consider those that firmer bee ; 

And make the freedome I have lost 

A meanes that may remember thee ; 
Had Christ not tliy redeemer bin, 
What horrid thrall thou hadst been in ! 

These iron chaines, the bolts of Steele, 
Which other poore offenders griend, 
The wants and cares vvliich they do feele 
May bring some greater thing to mind ; 
For by their griefe thou slialt doe well 
To thinke upon the paines of hell. 

Or when through me thou seest a man 
Condemned vnto a mortall death, 
How sad he lookes, how pale, how wan, 
Drawing with fear his panting breath; 
Thinke if in that such griefe thou see, 
How sad will. Go, yee cursed ! bee. 

Againe, when he that fear'd to dye, 
Past hope, doth see his pardon brought, 
Reade but the joy that's in his eye. 
And then conuey it to thy thought; 

There thinke betvvixt my heart and thee 
How sweet will. Come, yee blessed! bee. 

Thus if thou doe, though closed here. 
My bondage 1 shall deem the lesse; 
I neither shall have cause to feare, 
Nor yet bewaile my sad distresse: 

For whether Hue, or pine, or dye, 

We shall haue blisse eternally. 



Willy. 
Trust me ! I see the cage doth some birds good ; 
And if they do not suffer too much wrong. 



216 GEORGE WITHER. 



Will teach them sweeter descants than the wood. 
Beleeu't ! I like the subiect of thy song, 
It showes thou art in no distempered mood; 
But cause to heare the residue I loner, 

My sheep to-morrow I will nearer bring, 

And spend the day to heare thee talk and sing. 
Yet ere we part, Roget to, areed 
Of whom thou learndst to make such songs as 

these ; 
I neuer yet heard any shepheard's reede 
Tune in mishap a straine that more could please. 
Surely thou dost inuoke at this thy need 
Some power that we neglect in other layes: 

For here's a name and words that but few 
swaines 

Haue mentioned at their meeting on the plaines. 

Roget. 
Indeed 'tis true ; and they are sore to blame 
That doe so much neglect it in their songs ; 
For thence proceedeth such a worthy fame 
As is not subject vnto enue's wrongs ; 
That is the most to be respected name 
Of our true Pan, whose worth sits on all tongues, 
And what the ancient shepheards vse to prayse 
In sacred anthems sung on holy dayes. 

Hee that first taught his musike such a straine, 
Was that sweet shepheard' who, vntill a king. 
Kept sheepe upon the hony, milky plaine, 
That is inricht by Jordan's watering : 
He in his troubles eased the bodie's paines 
By measures raised to the soule's rauishing ; 
And his sweet numbers onely, most diuine, 
Gaue first the being to this song of mine. 

^ King David. 



SONNET. 



217 



Willy. 

Let his good spirit euer witli thee dwell, 
That I might hear such musicke every day. 

Philarete, 
Thankes ! but would now it pleased thee to play. 
Yet sure 'tis late, thy weather rings his bell, 
And swaines to fold or homeward drive away. 

mily. 

And yon goes Cuddy, therefore fare thou well ! 
rie make his sheepe for me a little stay ; 
And if thou thinke it fit I'll bring him too 
Next morning hither. * * * 

Philarete. 
* * * Prithee, Willy I do. 



LINES, 

From " The Motto.'' 

And first, that no man else may censure me 
For vaunting what belongeth not to me, 
Heare what 1 have not, for I'le not deny 
To make confession of my poverty. 

I have not of myselfe the powre or grace 
To be, or not to be ; one minute-space 
I have not strength another word to write, 
Or tell you what I purpose to indite ; 
Or thinke out halfe a thought, before my death, 
But by the leave of him that gave me breath. 
I have no native goodnes in my soul. 
But I was over all corrupt and foul : 



218 GEORGE WITHER. 



And till another cleans'd me I had nought 
That was not stain'd within me : not a thought. 
I have no propper merrit ; neither will, 
Or to resolve, or act, but what is ill ; 
I have no meanes of safety, or content. 
In ought which mine owne wisdom can invent. 
Nor have I reason to be desperate tho, 
Because for this a remedy I know. 

I have no portion in the world like this. 
That I may breathe that ayre which common is, 
Nor have I seen within this spacious round 
What I have worth my joy or sorrow found, 
Except it hath for these that follow binn, 
The love of my Redeemer, and my sinn. 

I none of those great priviledges have 
Which makes the minions of the time so brave ; 
I have no sumpteous pallaces, or bowers 
That overtop my neighbours with their tow'rs; 
I have no large demeanes or princely rents, 
Like those heroes, nor their discontents ; 
I have no glories from mine auncesters. 
For want of reall worth to bragg of theirs ; 
Nor have I baseness in my pedigree : 
For it is noble, though obscure it be. 

I have no golde those honours to obtaine. 
Which men might heretofore by vertue gaine ; 
Nor have I witt, if wealth were given me, 
To thinke bought place, or title, honour'd me. 
I (yet) have no beliefe that they are wise 
Who for base ends can basely temporise : 
Or that it will at length be ill for me. 
That I liv'd poore to keepe my spirit free. 

I have no causes in our pleading courts. 
Nor start I at our Chancery reports ; 
No fearfull bill hath yet affrighted me, 
No motion, order, judgement, or decree. 



I 



LINES. 219 

Nor have I forced beene to tedious journeys 
Betwixt my counsellors and my attorneys. 
I have no neede of these long-gowned warriers, 
Who play at Westminster, unarm'd, at barriers : 
For gamster for those Common-pleas am I 
Whose sport is marred by the Chancery. 



I have no complements, but what may show 
That I doe manners and good breeding know; 
For much 1 hate the forced apish tricks 
Of these our home-disdaining politicks : 
Who to the forraine guises are affected. 
That English honesty is quite rejected ; 
And in the stead thereof, they furnisht home 
With shadovves of humanity doe come. 
Oh! how judicious, in their owne esteeme, 
And how compleatly travelled they seem, 
If, in the place of reall kindnesses, 
(Which nature could have taught them to ex- 

presse,) 
They can, with gestures, lookes, and language 

sweet, 
Fawne like a curtezan on all they meete ; 
And vie in humble and kind speeches, when 
They doe most proudly and most falsely meane. 

On this too many falsely set their face, 
Of courtship and of wisdome ; but 'tis base. 
For servile unto me it doth appeare 
When we descend to soothe and flatter, where 
We want affection : yea, I hate it more 
Than to be borne a slave, or to be poore. 
I have no pleasure or delight in ought 
That by dissembling must to passe be brought ; 
If I dislike, I'll sooner tell them so, 
Then hide my face beneath a friendly show ; 



220 



GEORGE WITHER. 



For he who to be just hath an intent, 
Needs nor dissemble nor a lie invent. 
I rather wish to faile with honestie, 
Then to prevaile in ought by treacherie. 
And with this niinde I'll safer sleep, then all 
Our Macavillian poHtitians shall. 

I have no minde to flatter ; though I might 
Be made some lord's companion, or a knight; 
Nor shall my verse for me on begging goe, 
Though I might starve unlesse it did doe so. 

****** 

I cannot (for my life) my pen compell. 
Upon the praise of any man to dwell : 
Unlesse 1 know (or thinke at least) his worth 
To be the same which I have blazed forth. 
Had I some honest suit, the gaine of which 
Would make me noble, eminent, and rich. 
And that to com passe it no meanes there were, 
Unlesse I basely flatter'd some great peere ; 
Would with that suite my mine I might get, 
If on those terms I would endeavour it. 

I have not bin to their condition borne 
Who are enclyned to respect, and scorne, 
As men in their estates doe rise or fall : 
Or rich or poore, I vertue love in all. 
And where I find it not, I doe despise 
To fawn on them ; how high soe're they rise ; 
For where proud greatnesse without worth I see 
Old Mordecay had not a stiflFer knee. 

I cannot give a plaudit (I protest) 
When, as his lordship thinks, he breakes a jeast, 
Unles it move me ; neither can 1 grin 
When he a causeles laughter doth begin ; 
I cannot sweare him truly honourable, 
Because he once receiv'd me to his table, 



LINES. 221 

And talk't as if the Muses glad might be 

That he vouchsafed such a grace to me : 

His slender worth I could not blazcn so 

By strange hyperboles, as some would do ; 

Or wonder at it, as if none had bin 

His equall, since King William first came in. 

Nor can 1 thinke true vertue ever car'd 

To give or take (for praise) what I have heard. 

For, if we pryze them well, vvjiat goodly grace 
Have outward beauties, riches, titles, place, 
Or such, that we the owners should commend, 
When no true vertues doe on these attend ? 
If beautiful he be, what honor's that? 
As fayre as he is many a beggar's brat. 
If we his noble titles would extoU, 
Those titles he may have, and be a fool. 
If seats of justice he hath climbed (we say), 
So tyrants and corrupt oppressors may. 
If for a large estate his praise we tell, 
A thousand villains may be praised as well. 
If he his prince's good esteeme be in, 
W^hy so hath many a bloudy traytor bin. 
And if in these things he alone excell, 
Let those that list upon his praises dwell. 
Some other worth 1 find ere I have sense 
Of any praise deserving excellence. 
I have no friends that once affected were, 
But to my heart they sit this day as neare 
As when I most endear'd them (though they seeme 
To fall from my opinion or esteeme :) 
For pretious time in idle would be spent. 
If I with all should alwayes complement ; 
And till my love I may to purpose show, 
I care not wher' they tliink I love or no. 
For sure I am, if any find me chang'd, 
Their trreatnes, not their meannesse, me estranged. 



222 GEORGE WITHER. 

PSALM LVII. 

Lord, grant, oh grant me tliy compassion ; 

For I in thee my trust haue placed ; 
Display thy wings for my saluation, 
Until my greefs are over-passed. 
To thee I sue, Oh God most high, 
To tliee that canst all want supplie. 

From their despights who seek to rend mee, 

Let help, O Lord ! from heaven be daigned, 
And let thy truth and loue defend me ; 
For I with lions am detained : 

With men inflam'd, whose biting words 
Are shafts, and speares, and naked swords. 

Let over heauen God's praise be reared, 

And through the world his glorie showed ; 
For they who netts for mee prepared, 

(They who my soul to ground had bowed,) 
Eu n they within those trapps are caught, 
Which for my fall their hands had wrought. 

Oh God ! my hart now ready maketh, 

My hart is for thy praise preparing; 
My tongue, my harpe, my lute awaketh, 
And I myselfe betimes vprearing, 

Will speak and sing in praise of thee. 
Where greatest throngs of people be. 
For, Lord, thy mercies forth are stretched. 

As farr as are the sphears extended ; 
Thy truth unto the clouds hath reached. 
And thou thyself art high ascended. 
Let still, thy fame and praise. Oh God ! 
Through heauen and earth be spread abrode. 



XXXIX. 
JOSEPH HALL. 



PSALM L 



Who hath not walkt astray 
In wicked men's aduise, 
Nor stood in sinners' way, 
Nor in their companies 

That scorners are, 

As their fit mate. 

In scoffing chayre 

Hath euer sate ; 

But in thy lawes diuine, 
O Lord, sets his dehght, 
And in those lawes of thine 
Studies all day and night. 

Oh how that man 

Thrice blessed is ! 

And sure shall gaine 

Eternall blisse. 

He shall be like the tree 
Set by the water-springs. 
Which when his seasons 
Most pleasant fruite forth brings, 

Whose boughes so greene 

Shall neuer fade. 

But couered bene 

With comely shade. 

So to this happy wight 

All his designes shall thriue, 



224 JOSEPH HALL. 



Whereas the man vnright, 

As chatfe which wincles do driue, 

With euery blast 

Is tost on by, 

Nor can at last 

In safety lie. 
Wherefore in that sad doome 
They dare not rise from dust, 
Nor shall no sinner come 
To glory of tlie iust. 

For God will giue 

The iust man's way, 

While sinner's race 

Run to decay. 



PSALM VII. 

On thee, O Lord my God, relies 
My onely trust from bloudy spight ; 
Of all my raging enemies 
Oh let thy mercy me acquite; 
Lest they, like greedy lyons, rend 
My soule, while none shall it defend. 

O Lord, if 1 this thing have wrought ; 
If in my hands be found such ill ; 
If I with mischief ever sought 
To pay good turnes, or did not still 
Doe good unto my causeless foe 
That thirsted for my overthrow ; 

Then let my foe in eager chase 
O'ertake my soule, and proudly tread 
My life below, and with disgrace 
In dust laye downe mine honour dead. 
Rise up in rage, O Lord, eft soone 
Advance thine arm against my fo'ne. 



PSALM VII. 225 



And wake for me, till thou fulfill 

My proniis'd riglit : so shall glad throngs 

Of people flock unto this hill. 

For their sakes then reuenge my wrongs 

And rouse thyself. Thy judgments he 

O'er all the world : Lord, judge thou me. 

As truth and honest innocence 

Thou find'st in me, Lord, judge thou me ; 

Settle the just with sure defence : 

Let me the wicked's malice see 

Brought to an end : for thy just eye 

Doth heart and inward reines descry. 

My safety stands in God, who shields 
The sound in heart, whose doome, each day. 
To just men and contemners yeelds 
Their due. Except he change his way, 
His sword is whet, to blood intended ; 
His murdering bow is ready bended. 

Weapons of death he hath addrest. 
And arrowes keene to pierce my foe, 
Who late bred mischiefe in his breast; 
But when he doth on travell goe. 
Brings forth a lye ; deep pits doth delve, 
And falls into his pits himselve. 

Back to his own head shall rebound 
His plotted mischiefe ; and his wrongs 
His crowne shall craze : but I shall sound 
Jehouah's praise with thankful songs, 
And with his glorious name expresse, 
And tell of all his righteousnesse. 



[jAlIEb I. 1'OEIS.J 15 

/ 



226 JOSEPH HALL. 



EXTRACT 

From ^^ Lachrymne Lachrymarum.''^ 

(Of the rainbowe, that was reported to be seen in the night over 
St. James's, before the Prince's death ; and of the unseasonable 
winter since.) 

Was ever nightly rainbowe seen ? 

Did ever winter mourne in greene ? 

Had that long bowe been bent by day 

That chased all our clouds away ; 

But now that it by night appeares, 

It tells the deluge of our teares: 

No marvell rainbowes shine by night, 

When suns yshorne do lose their light. 

Iris was wont to be, of old, 

Heauen's messenger to earthly mold ; 

And now she came to bring us down 

Sad news of Henry's better crowne. 

And as the eastern star did tell 

The Persian sages of that cell 

Where Sion's King was borne and lay, 

And over that same house did stay; 

So did this western breeze descry 

Where Henry, prince of men, should die. 

Lo ! there this arch of heavenly state 

Rais'd to the triumph of his fate; 

Yet rais'd in dark of night, to showe 

His glory should be with our woe. 

And now, for that men's mourning weed. 

Reports a griefe not felt indeed; 

The winter weepes and mournes indeed, 

Though clothed in a summer-weed. 



XL. 

WILLIAM WILLYMAT. 



STANZAS, 

From "A Princess Looking-glanse.*' 

On God depend, to him be constant true, 
To blesse you in your office to him sue ; 
By the externe vse whereof let all men see 
How the inward heart is fraught with pietie ; 
In things indiferent let your gesture shew 
An image plain of uertue's decent hew. 

Remember well your passions to digest 
Before you seeke great sutes to set at rest ; 
For wrath short madnes is : doe nothing mad, 
Th' effects whereof haue alwaies proued bad ; 
The Apostles' rule chuse rather to obserue. 
Let anger none from God's lawes make you 
swarue. 

Gladly aduance the good and uertuous, 
With royall giftes that are most glorious ; 
Yet see that none, though noble, too high growe, 
Least stately kingdome thereby be brouglit lovve : 
Due punishment let wicked men still haue, 
For own desertes, not other's right doth craue. 



15—2 



XLI. 
ANONYMOUS. 



TO THE MOST RARE VERTUE OF TRUE 

HUMLILITIE. VPON THE CROWNE 

OF THORNES. 

King Godfrey would not weare 
A diadem of golde, 
When Christ his Lord did beare 
A crowne of thornes, whose every cruell folde 
That royal head did teare ; 

Dipping their sharp points deepe, 
While angels stood to weepe. 
In that most precious bloud, 
Whose venerable floud 
Made wither'd stockes green bud, and leaues to 
beare. 

Godfrey's deuotion 
Findes now a starry crowne, 
In city more by much 
Noble and faire then that recouered towne. 
Whom Christ's thornes doe not touch, 

Whom his blood mooueth not. 

Who hath Christ's loue forgot, 

Were he the greatest thing 

That euer was call'd king. 
At being spurn'd to hell ought not to grutch. 



XLII. 
.AMELIA LANYER. 



THE TEARES OF THE DAUGHTER OF 
JERUSALEM. 

Thrice happy women ! that obtain'd such grace 
From Him whose worth the world could not con- 

taine, 
Immediately to turne about his face, 
As not rem.embering his great griefe and paine, 
To comfort you, whose teares powr'd forth apace 
On Flora's bankes, like showers of April's raine : 
Your cries inforced mercie, grace, and loue, 
From Him whom greatest princes would not 
moue. 

To speake one word, nor once to lift his eyes, 
Vnto proud Pilate — no, nor Herod, king, 
By all the questions that they would deuise, 
Could make him answere to no manner of thing: 
Yet these poore women, by their piteous cries. 
Did mooue their Lord, their louer, and their king. 
To take compassion, turne about and speake 
To them whose hearts were ready now to 
breake. 

Most blessed daughters of Jerusalem, 
Who found such favour in your Sauior's sight. 
To turne his face when you did pitie him ; 
Youre tearefull eyes beheld his eies more bright ; 
Your faith and loue vnto such grace did clime 
To haue reflection from this heau'nly light : 



230 AMELIA LANYER. 

Your eagles' eyes did gaze against this sunne, 
Your hearts did think, he dead, the world were 
done. 

When spightful men with torments did oppresse 

Th' afflicted body of this innocent doue, 

Poore women, seeing how much they did trans- 

gresse, 
By teares, by sighes, by cries intreat, — nay, proue 
What may be done among the thickest presse ; 
They labour still these tyrants' hearts to moue, 
In pitie and compassion to forbeare 
Their whipping, spurning, tearing of his haire. 

But all in vaine — their malice hath no end ; 
Their hearts more hard than flint, or marble stone : 
Now, to his griefe, his greatnesse they attend. 
Where he, God knowes, had rather be alone ; 
They are his guard, yet seeke all meanes to offend : 
Well may he grieve, well may he sigh and groane ; 
Vnder the burden of a heauy crosse 
He faintly goes to make their gaine his losse. 



XLIII. 
SIR JOHN STRADLING. 



STANZAS, 

From " Beati Pacijici.^* 

The God of Peace, by this name is he knovvne, 
His peace all vnderstanding doth surmount ; 
Then those whom he vouchsafeth for his owne, 
If they to dwell with him doe make account, 
Must live in peace and perfect vnity, 
Else, if they say thare his, I'le sweare they lye. 
Peace, Loue, and Concord, Christian badges be, 
By them are Christ's disciples knowne from others : 
But such as Hue voyd of all charitie, 
Are not his seruants, much lesse then his brothers ; 

They to another master doe retaine, 
^ And he must pay them wages for their paine. 
Sweet is the name of peace, but sweeter farre 
The thing itself; experience prooues it true : 
An adage old doth tell me, Sweet is warre. 
To whom ? To him that warre yet neuer knew. 
If any list to try before he trust, 
Such will approoue my saying true and iust. 

If men did vnderstand what ioy of heart. 
What inward comfort to a soule distrest. 
What ease of griefe, and what release from smart, 
God's peace doth bring, and how it makes men 
blest ; 
They would sell all they have to get that trea- 
sure, 
Placing therein their only ioy and pleasure. 



232 SIR JOHN STRADLING. 



Of peace God is the author and the giuer ; 
A King so great and bountiful! as he 
Bestovves not trifles on his true beheuer : 
Then peace, God's gift, must needs a good one be. 
All monarchs vpon earth, thou ioyn'd in one, 
May not compare their gifts with his alone. 

Christ, when he came, brought peace, and when 

he parted, 
Left that behind to his disciples deere : 
Their doctrine, vnto those whom they conuerted. 
Was full of peace ; and whilst they liued heere 
They taught vs still to pray, Da pacem nobis, 
As Christ at parting says to them, Fax vobis. 

Christ is our peace ; what can be spoke more full, 
In praise of that which needs none other glosing? 
Yet are our wits, in things diuine, so dull. 
As rather leane on human sense reposing, 
Then on the truth : wherein he tliat doth rest 
(Say worldlings what they list) is surely blest. 

Well spake the Hebrewes, when they wished good 
Vnto their neighbour whom they passed by. 
Peace be to thee ; which, rightly vnderstood, 
ImpHes all blisse, and all felicity. 

That sacred tongue in briefe expresseth to vs 
What good peace (if we it imbrace) will doe vs. 

Men of meeke spirit shall the land possesse ; 
Peace in abundance shall refresh their hearts : 
Of innocence and perfect vprightnesse 
Peace is the end — (good pay for high deserts) : 
The hauty- hearted, wicked, and vniust. 
Some other thing for hire expect they must. 

Tell, who began to breake the sacred band 
Of blessed peace, wherein man liu'd at first : 



STANZAS. 233 



Was't not that Cain, vvlio lifted vp his hand, 
And witli a murthrous mind (O wretch accurst !) 
Brake peace, and foidiy slue his onely brother, 
Though they had both one father and one 
mother ? 

This was the first of men that so transgressed. 
Yet long before the deuill led the dance ; 
When Adam and his wife stood in state blessed, 
In paradise ; it fell not out by chance, 
But by suggestion of the wicked fiend, 
That man made God his foe, which was his 
friend. 

The deuill was a make-bate and man-slayer 
From the beginning, so continues still ; 
All that be such must vnto him repaire, 
Where they shall finde of brawles and stirs their 
fill: 
Let them not looke for peace, — ther's none in 

hell ; 
Nay, hel's on earth wheras peace doth not 
dwell. 

In heauen is peace, — earth's heauen where peace 

dwelleth : 
A man within himself may be at bate. 
The peace of conscience all peace else excelleth ; 
What so disquiets that, well maist thou hate. 
This both with God and with our selues doth 

set vs 
At perfect rest, and then can nothing fret vs. 

O what a hell is't in a countrey cot 

Where dwels not peace, but harsh debate and 

strife ! 
All plentie's there, they are not worth a groat, 
larres being only 'twixt the man and wife : 



SIR JOHN STRADLING. 



y alone do loue, and liue as friends, 
1 defects besides that makes amends. 

I tir example of their parents follow ; 

ruants doe their masters imitate : 

one (but if he haue his heart all hollow) 

es not in beholdingr such a state. 

is the power of gracious vnity, 

s earthly men as heauenly angels be. 

yet further to a stately towne, 
)eace and concord swayes 'mongst all de- 
rees ; 

md plenty doe their labours crowne, 
e together like a swarme of bees ; 
great and small bring honey to the hiue, 
ne is he that knowes not there to thriue. 

domes and of empires, large and great, 
y be said, and more if it were need : 
ce that doth adorne a prince's seat, 
it glorious, like God's throne indeed : 
ngs are God's lieutenants, so should shine 
thrones, in sort resembling the diuine. 

en's kingdome there is no contending, 
ubiects know and doe their duties right : 
well, that there needs no amending ; 
fod and King is euer in their sight. 
s not for terror, but t'increase their blisse, 
1 his presence all contentment is. 

t, aboue there was a foule rebelling, 
ictious troupes of angell mutiners, 
vith great Lucifer, in damn'd pride svvell- 
ng, 

mbled downc, as vilde conspiraters, 
highest lieauen, into that burning lake, 
h once to thinke on any heart would quake. 



„„. since that time". 

liieleastfe"'^-- 

'Tlioseangelr. 

i Had this free clianc: 

picliisfoTav'. 

Not the least ioi. 
t 

I And so thej liue in 
No more), that is, 
Such peaces 
Such loue as ....... 

With psainii, a; 
i lole, 
I YeeldiDglaudtotiiej 



STANZAS. 235 



But since that time there neuer chanced more 
The least disorder — neiicr will againe ; 
Those angels that were true to God before 
Had this free charter, that whil'st he did raigne 
(Which is for aye) they neuer should decline 
Not the least iot from his good will diuine. 

And so they liue in peace (there needs be spoken 
No more), that is, in a most blessed state ; 
Such peace as henceforth neuer can be broken, 
Such loue as neuer can give way to hate ; 

With psalms, and hymnes, and heauenly me- 
lodic, 

Yeelding laud to the glorious Trinitie. 



XLIV. 
NATHANAEL BAXTER. 



THE DEITY. 

There was one Soueraigne God, which we call 

Pan, 
That cannot be defin'd by mortal man. 
Some call him loua, for his existence ; 
Some Elohym, for his excellences- 
Some call him Theos, for his burning light ; 
Some call him Deus, for his fearful 1 might ; 
Some call him mightie Tetragrammaton, 
Of letters fovver in composition. 
There is no region vnderneath the skie 
But by fower letters write the Deitie. 
For fovver is a perfect number square, 
And eequall sides in euerie part doth beare. 
And God is that, which sometime Good we nam'd, 
Before our English tongue was shorter fram'd : 
Pan, in the Greeke, the shepheards do him call. 
Which we do tearm the whole vniuersall : 
All in himself, all one, all euerie W'liere, 
All in the center, all out, all in the spheare, 
All seeing all, all comprehending all. 
All blessed, all mightie, all yeternall ; 
Comprehended in no circumference, 
Of no beginning, nor ending essence ; 
Not capable of composition, 
Qualitie, accident, diuision. 
Passion, forme, or alteration ; 
All permanent, without mutation ; 



THE DEITY. 



237 



Principall inouer, alwaies in action, 

Without wearinesse or intermission ; 

Imniortull, and without infinnitie, 

Ot" everlasting splendent maiestie, 

One in essence, not to be diuided, 

Yet into Trinitie distinguished ; 

Three in one essence, one essence in tliree, 

A wonder, I confesse, too hard tor mee ; 

Yet diuine poets innumerable, 

At theorems, and demonstrations, 

Deliuer it to our contemplations. 

The Father, Sonne, and Holy Ghost, these three 

Are subsistent persons in the Deitie : 

Abba, Ben, Ruach, blessed poets sing, 

Are the true names of Pan, coelestiall King. 



MAN CREATED. 

Then formed He a prince, of royall dignitie, 
Of a vvonderfull grace and maiestie, 
To sway this imperiall monarchic. 
He framed first his bodie's lineaments. 
With all his admirable complements, 
As a yong man of thirtie yeares of age, 
Beautifull, gratious, of comely visage ; 
Yet dead he lay as carkasse on a greene. 
No life or motion in him felt or scene, 
Like sweete Adonis sleeping on the mount, 
Whom peerlesse Venus had in high account : 
Then breath'd He into him the breath of life, 
AVhere presently began a gentle strife. 
When euery limme began it selfe to moue. 
And stretch it selfe, his vitall force to proue ; 
The closed eyes their curtaines did display. 
The rowling eye had motion euery way ; 



288 NATHANAEL BAXTER. 

The nosthrils 'gan to feel the fragrant smell 

Of sweetest-sented flowers, which there did dwell ; 

The eare began to heare melodious notes 

Of daintie birds, from out their warbling throates ; 

The rubie, liquid, warming vitall blood, 

Pass'd euerie veine, as riuer's streaming flood 

From Liuer's fountaine, t' impart nourishment 

Vnto the heart that hath the gouernment, 

And so through conduits, secretly contriu'd, 

Is blood to euerie humane part deriu'd. 

This life to euery part gaue perfect sense. 

To feele according to their difference. 

Within his head, by hidden instruments. 

Were placed Nature's blessed ornaments. 

The forehead kept obiected phantasie. 

The hinder part reteyneth memorie ; 

Intelligence hath her place principall 

In the crowne of the head, highest of all, 

Fit to recciue obiects from phantasie. 

And to commit them vnto memorie ; 

Within a branchie filme there lyeth the braine, 

Close rampir'd vp with barracados twaine, 

Both maters, and the flint-hardie scull : 

Here reignes the soule, in maner wonderfull ; 

From thence she doth diff"use her operation. 

To euerie member in his scituation. 



XLV. 
NICHOLAS BRETON. 



INVECTIVE: THE HATE OF TREASON. 

O THE sweet seiice of love's humilitie ! 

Which feares displeasure in a clearest friend, 

The onely note of Truth's nobilitie, 

Whose worthy grace is graced without end ; 

For who wants faith, wants little of a friend ; 
While faithfull love, in humble truth approved, 
Doth euer Hue, of God and man beloued. 

Alas ! the little time of Nature's leave. 
To runne the course of her allotted care, 
W here idle shadovves the eie deceaue, 
That onely hunteth after Fortune's show, 
And bad must leaue it, ere it be aware : 

Looke, looke at heauen, and let the world go by, 
Better to die to liue, than Hue to die. 
Let pride be hatcfuU vnto euery state, — 
It is a vice with vertue not allowed ; 
And such a vice as vertue hath in hate. 
For vertue neuer makes the s])irit prow'de. 
And in advauncement of nobilitie 
Gives greatest graces, Truth's humilitie. 
W liich grace is gracious in the sight of God, 
Makes men as saints and women angells seeme, 
Makes sinne forgotten, mercy vse no rod, 
And constant faith to prooue in great esteeme ; 
While wisdome's care can neuer truth misdeem, 
But is in some a blessing of the highest. 
And to the nature of himself the nighest. 



240 NICHOLAS BRETON. 



A PRAYER. 

Oh, with thy grace my heart inspire, 
To bring forth fruites of thy desire. 
Give me thy Peter's penitence, 
Paul's faith, and Job his patience. 
And Marie's grace, and John his loue, 
That in my heart I may approue. 
When all these graces meete in mee. 
What ioy my soule shall have in thee : 
But oh, my God ! my heart doth ake, 
My soule with trembling fear doth quake. 
That sinne hath brought me in such plight 
As makes me ouglie in thy sight ; 
And I (0 wretch !) am one of those 
Whom thou hast reckoned for thy foes. 
And that thy mercie will not heare me. 
Nor comfort euer shall come near mee ; 
My prayer turned into sinne. 
No gate of grace shall enter in ; 
But all my thoughts are farre aniisse. 
Shall banisht be from hope of blisse ; 
And my poore soule, by sinne's desart, 
Condemn'd vnto eternall smart. 
And yet again, meethinks, I see 
How thy great mercie lookes on mee, 
And tels me faith may be victorious. 
While grace will be in mercie glorious. 
And what true hartes do truelie proue, 
That turne to thee in teares of loue ; 
In which vnfaigned faithful! teares. 
Wherein the wofuU spirit weares, 
1 humbly fall at mercie's feete. 
Where grace, and loue, and gloria meete; 
And in teares of true contrition 
Thus makes my wofuU soule's petition : 



A PRAYER. 241 

In mcrcie looke on me, deare God ; 
Forgive my sinnes, forbeare tliy rod ; 
Behold my griefe and ease my paine, 
And tcike me to thy grace againe, 
That I may see that bright Simne shine, 
Whose iilorie neuer can decline ; 
Where I with Simeon's ioy may sing 
When 1 embrace my holy King, 
And sinne and sorrovves cease, 
As my soule may rest in peace. 



[.lAMES I. POETS.] 16 



XLVI. 
GEORGE RALEIGH. 



STANZAS, 

From " Christ on his Crosse.^* 

No sorrow long continueth, as we see, — 
The winter cannot waste out all the yeere, — 
As time requires, we sad or merry be ; 
111 fare sometimes ensweet'neth better cheere ; 
When clouds are past, we may discerne the sky, 
And night once past, the sunne approacheth 
nigh. 

The glasse is runne by which we took our taske, 
Our tender muse hath labored as she could ; 
Her sable vaile she must of force unmaske, 
And leave in silence what is left untold ; 
Begging good readers, in the end of all, 
To make good use of this her funeral. 

Thus have I now cast anchor on the shore, 
Where news of comfort to good hearts I bring ; 
After hard labour with an ebon oare, 
Washt in the current of a sable spring. 

Where shallows hindred, there I made to rise 
A flood of tears, distilling from mine eyes. 

What 1 have brought lies here in open view. 
Nor is it strange nor common unto all : 
What a young merchant giveth unto you, 
Must be received, be it ne're so small : 

You know great riches are not gain'd in haste ; 

A little fire makes a great flame at last. 



XLVII. 

RO. VN. 



A SIMILITUDE. 

This body then, I say, is like 

An house in each degree ; 
The soule the owner of the house 

J do account to bee. 

As touching first this body, then, 

I did of late declare, 
Is like an house in euery poynt ; 

But now I will compare 

This house vnto a commonwealth. 

Or as a cittie faire, 
Or like a corporation, 

Consisting of a mayer. 

And many other officers 

There needful to bee had, 
And the commons too, among the which 

Are people good and bad, 

And tlierefore need of goueniment, 

Such people for to guide ; 
And as each towne and commonwealth, 

Or cittie, hath beside 

Appoynted places for to kepe 
Their courtes of common law, 

Yea, and their courts of conscience too. 
To kepe these men in awe : 

So liath each house his magistrates 
And officers to serue, 

16—2 



244 Ro. VN. 

Yea, commoners too, and places fitt 
For courts vvliich do descrue. 

The chiefest seat in euery house 

It is the hart of man, 
Wherein if that the sperit of grace 

Do sit as judge, euen tlian 

The court of conscience uery well 
We may it call ; but see 

These officers vpon this court 
Always attendant bee. 



XLVIII. 
- JEROM. 



STANZAS, 

From " Origen*s Repentance.^' 

Here's a fit obiect for tliy loue and merits, — 
A thirsty soule desires a sweete refreshing, 
Wliose birth-sinne by his fatlier's claime inherits 
Hell as right heire — mucli more by his transgres- 
sions : 
Heere yet let mercy triumph, cease thine ire, 
And plucke me as a brand out of the fire. 

I know my guilt is great, my fall is grosse, 
My sinnes yell loude ; yet louder speakes 
Me and my guilt : I bring thee and thy crosse. 
Wherein my place thou pledge and surety stood ; 
One drop of that balme will my conscience cure, 
Applied by the hand of grace, and heale me sure. 

Oh, it surmounts all juloups, all confections. 
All cordials, drugs, bezar-vrmione. 
All smaragde, diamond*^, rubies, earthe's iniections, 
All pearle, all gold, all mines that ere were torne; 
They helpe the heart and body in a swound. 
But this reuiues the soull, cures conscience 
wound. 
As sacred oyle from Aaron's head distilling 
Downe to his skirts did speedily descend. 
So, Lord, with oyle of grace my soule be filling; 
Drop downe thy myiTh, this hard heart cause to 
bend : 
Me in thv garden set to gather spices, 
Lop off my lusts, and weede out all my vices. 



246 JEROM. 

Lord, speake the word, thy seruant shall be whole; 
Checke my soule's tempests, calmes will then 

ensue ; 
Poiire out thy spirit, I'le poure forth my soule ; 
Reflect one glimpse of grace, 'twill me renue ; 
Turne thou my tongue, and it shall sing thy 

praises. 
Touch thou my heart : my heart to heau'n thou 
raises. 

Giue thou me grace, and I shall giue thee glory; 

Lend me thy hand, I shall redeem my fall ; 

Strike thou my heart, I shall be sinne-sicke sorry ; 

Ope thou my eares, and I shall heare thy call ; 
Vnloose my lips, and tuey shall swiftly moue, 
To vent my heart's diuine thoughts of thy loue. 



XLIX. 

SIR HENRY worrox 



PSALM CIV. 



My soul, exalt the Lord with hymns of praise : 
O Lord my God, how boundless is thy might ! 

Whose throne of state is cloath'd with glorious 
rays, 
And round about hast robed thyself with light ; 
Who like a curtain hast the heavens displayed. 
And in the watry roofs thy chambers laid ; 

Whose chariots are the thickned clouds above, 
Who walkst ui)on the winged winds below ; 

At whose command the airy s])irits move. 
And fiery meteors their obedience show ; 
Wlio on this base tlie earth didst firmly found, 
And mad'st the deep to circumvent it round. 

The waves that rise would drown the highest hill, 
But at thy check they flie; and when they hear 

Thy thundering voice, they post to do thy will. 
And bound their furies in tiieir proper sphere ; 
Where surging floods and valing ebbs can tell 
That none beyond thy marks must sink or swell. 

Who hath dispos'd, but thou, the winding way 
Where springs down from their steepy crags do 
beat. 

At which both fostered beasts their thirsts allay. 
And the wild asses come to quench their heat ; 
Where birds resort, and, in their kind, thy praise 
Among the branches chant in warbling lays. 



248 SIR HENRY WOTTON. 

The mounts are watred from thy dwelling-place, 
The barns and meads are fill'd for man and 
beast ; 
Wine glads the heart, and oyl adorns the face, 
And bread the staff whereon our strength doth 

rest ; 
Nor shrubs alone feel thy sufficing hand, 
But even the cedars that so proudly stand. 

So have the fowls their sundry seats to breed ; 
The ranging stork in stately beeches dwells ; 

The climbing goats on hills securely feed, 
The miniijg coneys shroud in rocky cells : 
Nor can the heavenly lights their course forget. 
The moon her turns, or sun his times to set. 

Thou mak'st the night to over-vail the day; 

Then savage beasts creep from the silent wood, 
Then lions' whelps lie roaring for their prey, 

And at thv powerftd hand demand their food ; 

Who when at morn they all recouch again, 

Then toyling man till eve pursues his pain. 

O Lord, when on thy various works we look. 
How richly furnish'd is the earth we tread ! 

Where in the fair contents of Nature's book 
We may the wonders of tiiy wisdom read : 
Nor earth alone, but lo ! the sea so wide, 
Where, great and small, a world of creatures 
glide. 

There go the ships, that furrow out their way ; 

Yea, thereof whales enormous sights we see, 
Which yet have scope among the rest to play; 

And all do wait for their support on thee ; 

Who hast assigned each thing his ])ropcr food. 

And in due season dost dispense thy good. 



PSALM CIV. 249 



Tiiey gather, vvlien tliy gifts tliou dost divide ; 
Their stores abound, it' thou thy hand enlarge ; 

Confused they are, when thou tiiy beams dost hide; 
In dust resolved, it" thou their breath discharge: 
Again, when thou otlit'e reiiewst tlie seeds, 
The withered fields revest their cheerful! weeds. 

Be ever gloried here thy sovereign name. 

That thou mayst smile on all which thou hast 
made ; 
Whose frown alone can shake this earthly frame, 
And at whose touch the hills in smoak shall 

vade : 
For me, may (while I breathe) both harp and 

voice 
In sweet indictment of thy hymns rejoyce. 

Let sinners fail, let all profaneness cease ; 

His praise (my soul), his praise shall be thy peace. 



A HYMN. 



Oh, thou great Power ! in whom I move, 
For whom 1 live, to whom I die, 
Behold me through thy beams of love, 
Whilst on this couch of tears I lie , 
And cleanse my sordid soul within. 
By thy Christ's blood, the bath of sin. 

No hallowed oyls, no grains I need, 
No rags of saints, no purging fire ; 
One rosie drop from David s seed 
Was worlds of seas to quench thine ire : 
O precious ran some 1 which once paid, 
Tiiat Coimummatum est was said ; 



250 



SIR HENRY WOTTON. 



And said by Him that said no more, 
But seal'd it with liis sacred breath : 
Thou, then, that lias dispong'd my score, 
And dying wast tlie death of Death, 
Be to me now, on thee I call, 
My life, my strength, my joy, my all ! 



L. 

SIR WALTER RALEIGH. 



THE CROSSE OF CHRIST. 

Rise, O my soul, with thy desires to heaven, 
And with divinest contemplation use 
Thy time, where time's eternity is given ; 
And let vain thoughts no more thy thoughts abuse, 
But down in midnight darkness let them lie ; 
So live thy better, let thy worst thoughts die. 

And thou, my soul, inspired with holy flame, 
View and review, with most regardful eie. 
That holy crosse whence thy salvation came. 
On vyhich thy Saviour and thy sin did die ; 
For in that sacred object is much pleasure. 
And in that Saviour is my life, my treasure. 

To thee, O Jesu ! I direct mine eies. 

To thee my hands, to thee my humble knees; 

To thee my heart shall offer sacrifice. 

To thee my thoughts, who my thoughts only sees ; 

To thee myself— myself and all, I give; 

To thee I die, to thee 1 only live. 



LI. 
GEORGE CHAPMAN, 



AN ADDRESS TO DEATH. 

Partiall devourer ever of the best ! 
With headlong rapture sparing long tlie rest, 
Could not the precious teares his father shed, 
That are witli kingdomes to be ransomed, 
His bleeding prayer, upon his knees, t' implore 
That if for any sin of his. Heaven tore 
From his most royall body that chief limme, 
It might be ransom'd, for the rest of him ? 
Could not the sacred eies thou didst prophane 
In his great mother's teares ? the spightful bane 
Thou pour'dst upon the cheekes of all the Graces, 
In his most gracious sister's ? the defiices 
With all the furies' overflowing galles 
Cursedly fronting her neere nuptials ? 
Could not, O could not the Almighty ruth 
Of all these force thee to forbeare the youth 
Of our incomparable Prince of men, 
Whose age had made thy iron forke his pen, 
T' eternise what it now doth murder meerely. 
And shall have, from my soule, my curses yeerely ? 
TjTant ! what knew'st thou but the barbarous 

wound 
Thou gav'st the son, the father might confound ? 
Both liv'd so mixtly, and were joyntly one ; 
Spirit to spirit cleft; the humor bred 
In one heart, straight was with the other fed ; 
The blood of one the other's heart did fire — 
The heart and humour were the son and sire ; 



252 GEORGE CHAPMAN. 

The heart yet (void of humour's slenderest part) 
May easier live, than humour without heart : 
The river needes the helpfuil fountaine ever, 
More then the fountaine the supplyed river. 



A DESCRIPTION OF FEVER. 

Up to her left side leapt infernall Death, 
His head hid in a cloud of sensuall breath ; 
By her sat furious anguish, pale despight, 
Murmure and sorrowe, and possest affright, 
Yellow corruption, marrow-eating care ; 
Languor, chill trembling, fits irregulare ; 
Inconstant choller, public-voic'd complaint, 
Relentles rigor, and confusion faint ; 
Fran tick distemper, and hare-ey'd unrest. 
And short-breath'd thirst, with th' ever burning 

breast. 
A wreath of adders bound her trenched browes. 
Where torment ambush'd lay with all her throws ; 
Marmarian lyons, fring'd with flaming manes. 
Drew this grym furie, and her brood of banes : 
Then burnt her bloud-shot eyes, her temples yet 
Were cold as ice, her neck all drown'd in swet ; 
Palenes spred all her breast, her life's heat stung ; 
The mind's interpreter, her scorched tongue, 
Flow'd witli blew poison; from her yawning mouth 
Rheums fell, like spouts fil'd from the stormy south; 
Her swoln throte rattled, warm'd with life's last 

spark, 
And in her salt jawes painfull coughs did bark; 
Her teeth were stain'd with rust ; her sluttish hand 
She held out, reeking like a new-quencht brand ; 
In her left hand a quenchless fire did glow. 
And in her right palm freez'd Sithonian snow. 



THE END OF LEARNING. 253 



THE END OF LEARNING. • 

Tins is learning ; — to have skill to throw 

Reins on your bodie's powers that nothing knowe. 

And fill the soule's powers so with act and art 

That she can curbe the bodie's angrie part; 

All perturbations, all effects that stray 

From their one object, which is to obey 

Her soveraigne empire; as herselte should force 

Their functions only, to serve her discourse; 

And that, to beat the streight path of one ende, 

Which is — to make her substance still contend 

To be God's image, in informing it 

With knowledge, holy thoughts, and all forms fit 

For that eternitie ye seeke in way 

Of his sole imitation, and to sway 

Your life's love too, that He may still be center 

To all your pleasures; and you (here) may enter 

The next life's peace, in governing so well 

Your sensual parts, that you as free may dwell 

Of vulgare raptures here as when cahne death 

Dissolves that learned empire with your breath. 

To teach and live thus, is the only use 
And end of learning. Skill, that doth produce 
But tearmes and tongues, and parroting of arte, 
Without that powre to rule the errant part, 
Is that which some call learned ignorance, 
A serious trifle, error in a trance ; 
And let a scholar all earthy volumes carrie, 
He will be but a walking dictionarie, — 
A mere articulate clocke, that doth but speake 
By other's arts. 

So that as travaylers seeke their peace through 
storms, 
In passing many sees for many forms 



254 GEORGE CHAPMAN. 

Of forraigne government, indure the paine 
Of many faces seeing, and the gaine 
That strangers make of their strange loving hu- 
mors, 
Learn tongues, keep note-books, all to feed the 

tumors 
Of vaine discourse at home, or serve the course 
Of state employment, never having force 
T'employ themselves ; but idle compliments 
Must pay their pains, costs, slaveries, all their rents, 
And, though they many men know, get few friends. 
So covetous readers, setting many ends 
To their much skill to talke, studiers of phrase, 
Shifters in art, to flutter in the blaze 
Of ignorant count'nance ; to obtain degrees, 
And lye in learning's bottome, like the lees ; 
To be accounted deepe by shallow men. 
And carve all language in one glorious pen, 
May have much fame for learning ; but th' effect 
Proper to perfect learning, to direct 
Reason in such an art, as that it can 
Turn blood to soule, and make both one calme man. 
So making peace with God, doth differ farre 
From clerkes that goe with God and man to warre. 



LII. 
EDWARD HAKE. 



NO GOLD, NO GOODNESSE. 

O GOLD ! tliat gocst in and out, 

That rul'st and raignest at tliy will ; 

thou, that bringest things about, 
Why art thou absent from us still ? 

But O, our God ! O where art thou, 
That suff'rest gold to contjuer now ? 

You earthly men, who unto men 

Nought give where you can nothing take, 

1 speake to you ; regard me then : 

Your gold and goods your god you make , 
For whereas gold is, you are won. 
But where gold is not, you have done. 

Be honest, learned, skilfull, wise; 

Be what thou canst, — if gold thou want 
Thou maist lie still, thou shalt not rise, 
For nothing proves where gold is skant : 
For gold it is that doth the deed, 
But nothing prospers where is need. 

What shall I then lie downe and die ? 

Alas ! 1 cannot when 1 would ; 
Or shall 1 sit me downe and crie. 

And with my teares my griefe unfold ? 
Lament and crie, do what thou wilt, 
Thy cause is lost for lack of gilt. 

Yet say 1 not that all men looke 
To be rewarded of their deed ; 



256 



EDWARD HAKE. 



But tliis I say, that few men brooke 
To helpe a man that is in need ; 

For tho' he write with Homer's inke. 
Yet go he shall, before he drinke. 



COMPLAINING OF HIS WANT OF FRIENDS. 

Waking in my bed, I wept, 

And silently complain'd ; 
The cares that on me crept 

All hope of sleepe restrained, 

I called on my hap, 

I cried on my chaunce, 
W ill none stand in the gap ? 

AVill none my state advance ? 

My woe that never ends, 

My want that never dies. 
My state that never mends, 

My soule that ever cries ; 

All these are but the loome 
That warpeth up my death ; 

All these presage my doome, 
The losse of later breath. 

But is there not a joy 

That worldly joy excels, 
That helpeth all annoy. 

And worldly woe expels ? 

There is, no doubt: God grant it me! 
So shall those woes extinguisht be. 



LIII. 
RICHARD CORBET. 



AN ELEGIE ON DR. RAVIS, 

BISHOP OF LONDON. 

When I past Paul's, and travell'd in that walke 
Where all our Britaine sinners sweare and talk, 
And then beheld the body of my Lord 
Trood under foote by vice that he abhorr'd, 
It wounded me, the Landlord of all times 
Should let long lives and leases to their crimes. 
And to his springing honour did afford 
Scarce soe much time as to the prophet's gourd. 
Yet, since swift flights of vertue have apt ends, 
Like breath of angels, which a blessing sends, 
And vanisheth withall, whilst fouler deeds 
Expect a tedious harvest for bad seeds; 
I blame not fame and nature if they gave, 
Where they could give no more, their last, a grave. 
And wisely doe thy grieved friends forbeare 
Bubbles and alabaster boyes to reare 
On thy religious dust; for men did know 
Thy life, which such illusion cannot show ; 
For thou hast trod among those happy ones 
Who trust not in their superscriptions, 
Their hired epitaphs, and perjured stone. 
Which oft belies the soul when she is gone ; 
And durst committ thy body as it lyes 
To tongues of living men, nay, unbome eyes. 
What profits thee a sheet of lead ? what good 
If on thy corse a marble quarry stood ? 

[jAMES I. POETS.] 17 



258 RICHARD CORBET. 

Let those that fear their rising purchase vaults, 
And reare them statues to excuse their faults ; 
As if, like birds that peck at painted grapes, 
Their Judge knew not their persons from their 

shapes : 
Whilst thou assured, through thy easy dust 
Shalt rise at first ; they would not, though they 

must. 



LIV. 
WILLIAM ALEXANDER, EARL OF STIRLING. 



AN INVOCATION. 

Thou, of whose power (not reach'd by reason's 

lieiglil) 
The sea a drop, we th' earth a mote may call; 
And for whose trophees, stately to the sight, 
Tlie azure arke was rear'd (although too small), 
And from the lampe of whose most gracious light 
The sun (a sparke) weake, for weake eyes did fall ; 
Breatli thou a heavenly fury in my breast: 
I sing the sabbath of eternall rest. 

Though every where discern'd, no where confin'd, 

thou, whose feet the clouds (as dust) afford. 
Whose voyce the thunder, and whose breath the 

winde ; 
V/hose footstoole the earth, seate heaven, works 

of thy worde, 
Guards, hosts of angels, moving by thy minde. 
Whose weapons, famine, tempests, pest_, and sword; 
My cloudy knowledge by thy wisdome cleare. 
And by my weaknesse make thy power appeare. 

Loe, ravish'd, Lord, with pleasure of thy love, 

1 feele my soule enflamed with sacred fires, 
Thy judgements and thy mercies, whilst I move, 
To celebrate, my Muse with zeale aspires : 
Lord, by thy helpe, this enterprise approve. 
That successe so mav second mv desires. 
Make Sathan's race to tremble at mv lines. 
And thine rejoyce while as thy glory shines. 

17__2~ 



260 EARL OP STIRLING. 



GOD VISIBLE IN HIS WORKS. 

The stately heavens, which glory doth array, 

Are mirrours of God's admirable might ; 

There, whence forth spreads the night, forth springs 

the day. 
He fix'd the fountaines of tliis temporall light, 
Where stately stars enstall'd, some stand, some 

stray. 
All sparks of his great power (though small yet 

bright). 
By what none utter can, no, not conceive, 
All of his greatnesse, shadowes may perceive. 

What glorious lights through christall lanternes 

glance, 
(As alwaies burning with their Maker s love) ; 
.Spheares keepe one musicke, they one measure 

dance. 
Like influence below, like course above ; 
And all by order led, not drawne by chance. 
With majestic (as still in triumph) move. 
And (hberall of their store) seeme shouting thus: 
" Look up, all soules, and gaze on God through us." 

This pond'rous masse (though oft deform'd) still 

faire, 
Great in our sight, yet then a starre more small, 
Is ballanc'd (as a mote) aniid'st tlie ayre ; 
None knoues what way, yet to no side doth fall. 
And yearely springs, growes ripe, fades, talles, 

rich, hat'e ; 
Men's mother first, still mistresse, yet their thrall, 
It centers heavens, heavens compasse it; both be 
Bookes where God's power the ignorant may see. 



GOD VISIBLE IN HIS WORKS. 261 

Wliat ebbes, flowes, s\vels_, and sinks, wlio firme 

iloth keep ? 
Whilst flouds from the earth burst in abundance 

out, 
As she her brood did wash, or for them weepe : 
Who (having life) wliat dead tilings prove, dare 

doubt 
Who first did found the dungeons of the deepe ? 
But one in all, ore all, above, about ; 
The flouds, for our delight, first cahne were set, 
But storme and roare, since men did God foryet. 

Who parts the swelling spouts that sift the raine ? 
Who reines the windes, the waters doth empale ? 
Who frownes in stormes, then smiles in calmes 

againe, 
And doth dispense the treasures of the haile ? 
Wliose bow doth bended in the clouds remaine ? 
Whose darts (dread thunderbolts) make men looke 

pale ? 
Even thus these things to show his power aspire. 
As shadowes doe the sunne, as smoke doth fire. 

God visibly invisible who raignes, 
Soule of all soules, whose light each light directs. 
All first did freely make, and still maintaines, 
The greatest rules, the meanest not neglects ; 
Fore-knowes the end of all that he ordaines, 
His will each cause, each cause breeds fit effects; 
Who did make all, all thus could onely leade, 
None could make all, but who was never made. 



LV. 

HENRY ARTHINGTON. 



THE GOODNESS OF GOD TOWARDS ALL 
MANKIND MANIFOLD WAYES. 

THE FIRST point: 
In Creating all things for our ?we, and us for his glory. 

O GLORIOUS God ! how much is man 

For ever bound to praise thy Name, 
No mortall wight can rightly scan, 

As well thy workes expresse the same. 
If man look up with fixed eyes, 

How wonderfully doth appeare 
Thy workmanship in azure skyes, 

With all thy creatures planted there ; 

The sunne and moone above the rest, 
To guide and rule each day and night, 

With glistering starrs all ready prest, 
To pleasure us by shining bright ; 

The clouds that hang above our heads. 

As times and seasons do require. 
Their fruitfull showers abroad do spread, 

To satisfy our hartes' desire. 
If man cast down his eyes below, 

To view God's creatures here on earth, 
How do they all his love foreshew, 

Still to preserve man's vitall breath ' ; 
Tlie foules that flye in firmament, 

And all kind fishes in the sea, 

» Gen. i. 



THE GOODNESS OF GOD. 263 



To take and use for liis content, 

With beastes on tli' eartli to rule away^ ; 

And for man's meat did God provide 
All fruitfull trees (save only one), 

With every herb that beareth seed, 
For man all times to feed upon ^. 

A pleasant place, cal'd PaiTadice, 
God planted mankind first therein, 

To have all times what hart could wish, 
So long as he avoided sinne*; 

And that man might live in this state, 
And never die (unlesse he would), 

The tree of life, thereon to eate, 
God planted in the sacred mould* : 

How truely then might mankind say, 
How much are we, Lord, bound to thee, 

For all thy favours every way, 
Inlarged so aboundantly* ! 

Much more if tliou lift up thy mind, 
To meditate God's love to thee, 

A thousand fold thou shalt it finde 
Exceeding others in degree : 

For, in creating all things else, 

God only said, Let it be so ; 
And so they were (as Scripture tells), 

His mighty power, by word to shoe^ , 

But in creating man, God said. 

Let us make man ; whereby we see 

His perfect person to be made 
Even by the blessed Trinity : 



2 Gen. i. ^ lb. " Gen. ii. 

* lb. ® Ps. viii. ' Gen. i. 



264 HENRY ARTHINGTON. 



Which proveth man did farre excell 
All former workes, it is most plaine ; 

As that wliicli followes (marke it well). 
In our own i?nage, doth containe'. 

For by God's i?7iage^ in this place, 

Is meant these special qualities*, 
(His knoiclt'dge, truth, and holinesse,) 

AH which in man were pure hkewise': 

For knowledge, Adam first did name 
All living creatures in their kind ; 

His life aho was without blame. 
And all the graces of his 7ninde*: 

So that in these was no dissent 

'Twixt God and man, (for gifts most cleare,) 
Save (all in God were permanent,) 

But man might change, as did appeare*. 

Behold God's love to man yet more. 
In placing him the supreame lord 

Of all his creatures made before. 

To guide and governe by his wo^de^ 

And that which most did shew God's love, 
There was but one excepted tree, 

Which he forbad that man should proue, 
On pain of death eternally^. 

AVliat could God more have done for man, 
Or how much is man to him bound, 

No earthly wight can rightly scan; 

Then be not slacke his praise to sound ^ 



' Gen. i. 26. 27. » Gen. ii. 20. = Col. iii. 10. 

*Eph. iv.24. ^ Gen. iii. ^ Gen. i. "Gen. ii. ** Ps. viii. 



LVI. 
SIR WILLIAM LEIGHTON. 



TO THE TRUE DEVOTED READER. 

All curious quaint abiliments exil'd, 

In liumblest habite now my verse compil'd ; 

Like a poor pilgrime, all alone I stand, 

Taking my iorney to the Holy Land, 

And fain would have, since thus transported hither. 

All sorts, all sects, associate me thither ; 

But all (alas ! woe worth) doe me disdaine, 

And on my palmer's weeds with scorn com- 

plaine. 
Upbraiding me, that I, in time of yore. 
Triumphant vertue's vestures viuely wore. 
What though those lines a prisoner's pace now 

walk, 
Which whilom did in courtly measure stalke ? 
To open view now they expose their faults. 
Though like a weakeling that on crowches haultes; 
The fading flower those youthfuU times. 
Now reft of power, bewailes her ruthfuU crimes, 
And ruminating on a sea of sinne, 
Bewraies without what her betraies within ; 
Then with my poems playnness wract dispence, 
Devour'd in zeal, is oft distract in sence. 
Let not the rashnes of demolisht time 
Explode my harshnes and unpolisht rime, 
Nor shun me now, though I, like lowly Job, 
This leprous corps of sinne with rags enrobe; 
But sit by me, read me, and turn me ore, 
And with thine vnguents gently salue my soare. 



266 SIR WILLIAM LEIGHTON. 



Within this port weel'e anchor safe from rockes, 
From swelling billovves, raging gusts, and shocks, 
Till Thetis, Halcion, Neptune's force doth hayle, 
Then shall our gallion spread a loftier saile, 
And from outragious stormes and tempests stand 
For safe arivall in the Holy Land. 



LVII. 
RICHARD BRATHWAITE. 



THE AUTHOR TO HIS DISCONSOLATE 
BROTHER. 

Let not mishap deprive you of that hope 

Which yields some relish to your discontent ; 
Ayme your affections at Heaven's glorious scope, 
Which shovvres dovvne comfort, when all com- 
fort's spent : 
Then rest secure ; that Power which you adore 
Will make your joyes more full than ere 
before. 
Let not the sunne, now shadowed with a cloud, 
Make you suspect the sunne will never shine ; 
That ill which now seems ill, may once prove good: 
Time betters that which was depravde by time. 
Thus let my prayers, your teares, concord 
in one, [comfort's gone. 

To reape heav'n's comforts, when earth's 



A DESCRIFnON OF DEATH. 
Death is a raw-bon'd shrimp, nor low nor hie. 
Yet haz he power to make the highest low ; 
The summon-maister of mortahtie. 
The poore man's wished friend, the rich man's foe, 
The last remaines of Time's anatomic : 
A thief in pace — in pace more shure than slow ; 
A sleep, a dreame, whence we are said to have 
In sleep a death, and in our bed a grave. 
One who, how ere we seeme to have the power 
To leave our states, wherein we oft times erre, 



268 RICHARD BRATHWAITE. 

To such an one, as sole executour, 
Spite of our nose plays executioner : 
And as the leane kine did the fat devoure, 
So does this meagre slave the mightier ; 
Nor can we, if we should be choaked for't, 
Remove Death's action to another court. 

Arts though he know, yet he professeth none, 
For little haz he, and as little nedes ; 
Yet haz he trickes to catch the oldest one 
That on this earthie globe or centre treades, 
Nor will he leave him till his breath be gone, 
Cheering the wormes that on his body feedes ; 
Thus fearelesse he, as he haz ever beene. 
Makes his stroke to be felt, not to be scene. 

His signe's in Sagittary, and the but 
He shootes at is man's heart ; he ever fits 
The shaffs he shootes to th' quiver they are put : 
Won is he not to be by threats, intreats, 
Price, power, or prayer : at whats'ere he shoote 
Or aimes to hit, he never fails but hits : 
Darted he runnes as swift as ever ran 
Shot-herring made, just like an Irish-man. 

Nor differ they in habite ; though he weares 
No mantle, flanning trowses, being knowne 
By his moath-eaten rayment ; he appeares 
Right Irish — doublet, breeches, hose of one ; 
He haz no shift, yet he no vermin feares, 
(For vermin Death nor the Irish harbour none) : 
Yea, in their kind of fight compafd they are. 
For they invade both at unaware. 

Death is worm's caterer, who, when he comes. 
Will have provision, though the market starve ; 
He will be served before the mighty ones. 
And knows before where he intends to carve : 



A DESCRIPTION OP DEATH. 269 

It's he awakes the sin-heluUed drones, 
And cuts them sliort, as rightly they deserve ; 
It's he that all things to subjection brings, 
And plaies at foot-ball with the crowns of kings. 

Two eniptv lodges haz he in his head, 
Wliich luui two lights, but now his eies be gone ; 
Cheekes had he once, but they be hollowed ; 
Beautv he had, but now a})pcars there none : 
For all those moving parts be vanished, 
Presenting borrows if but lookt upon ; 
His colour sable, and his visage grim. 
With gastly lookes that still attend on him. 

Fleshie he was, but it is pict away, 
Belike, for that he haz so much to doe ; 
If clothed with flesh, he should be forc'd to stay, 
And shew (perchance) too much of mercie to 
Some young wench, who on the holy day 
Might force him love, if she could tell him how; 
Which to prevent, and better to restraine him, 
He goes so ugly, none should entertaine him. 

Yet entertained he will ; for though he be 
Contemn'd by th' perfuni'd curtezan, whose form 
Seemes coy to give him hospitalitie, 
Yet when he comes hee'l not one hour adjorne 
To give her summons of mortalitie. 
Converting: that same beautv did adorne 
Her composition, to corrupted earth, 
Whence she deriv'd both period and birth. 

Snaile-like, he comes on us with creeping pace, 
And takes us napping when we least think on : 
In's hand an hour-glasse, wliich inferres our race 
Is near an end; and though we strive to shun him, 
He moves when we move ; and that very place 
Whereto we flie, and think we have out-run him. 



270 RICHARD BRATHWAITE. 

There he appeares, and tells us it's not good 

To strive against that which cannot be withstood. 

If we shed teares, they're bootless ; for his eyes, 
In stead of sight, are moulded up with clay : 
If we assay to pierce his eares with cries, 
Vaine is our labour, fruitless our assay. 
For his remorceless eares all motions flies : 
Nor will he give the prince a longer day ; 
His payment must be present, and his doome, 
" Return to earth, thy cradle and thy tombe." 

Nor is his summons onely when we're old. 
For age and youth he equally attends ; 
Nor can we say that we have firmer hold 
In youth than age, or further from our ends, 
Save that we are by Nature's virdict told 
With length of yeares our hope of life extends : 
Thus young or old, if Death approach and say, 
'^ Eartii unto earth," he must perforce obay. 

A breath-bereaving breath, a vading shade 

Even in motion, — so, as it appears. 

He comes to tell us whereto we were made, 

And, like a friend, to rid us of our feares ; 

So as, if his approach were rightly weighed. 

He should be welcom'd more with joyes then tears, 

Joy to dissolve to earth from whence we came, 

That, after death, joy might receive the same. 

Naked his scalpe, thrill-open is his nose. 
His mouth from care to eare, his earthie breath 
Corrupt and noisome, which makes me suppose 
Some mouldie cells the manor-house of Death ; 
His shapeless leges bend backeward when he goes, 
His rake-leane body shrinking underneath ; 
Feeble he seems, reft both of iieart and power, 
Yet dare he bend the mightiest emperour. 



A DESCRIPTION OF DEATH. 271 

None he consorts with save worms, and men 
Prepar'd for worms' meat ; tliougli he make resort 
To country, city, village, now and then ; 
Yea, where hee's scldome welcome to the court. 
There will he enter, and will summon them ; 
And goe they must, thougli they be sorie t'or't. 
Thus country, citie, village, court, and all. 
Must their appearance make when Death doth 
them call. 

Chop-falne, crest-sunke, drie-bon'd anatomic. 
Earth-turned, mole-eied, flesh-hook, that puis us 

hence ; 
Night-crow, fate's-doome, that tells us we must die ; 
Pilgrim-remover, that deprives us sence ; 
Life's-date, soule's-gate that leads from miserie ; 
Man's sharp'st assault, admitting no defence ; 
Time's exit, or our intreat to that clime 
Where there's no time, nor periood of time. 

Nor stands he much upon our dangerous yeare, — 
All are alike to him : yea, oft we see, 
When we are most secure, then hee's most neare, 
Where th' yeare clymactericke is his jubile; 
For as he can transpose him every where. 
East, west, north, south, with all facilitie, 
So can he come, so cunning is his stealth, , 
And take us hence when we are best in health. 

Since Death is thus described (for this he is). 
Be still prepar'd, lest unprepar'd he come, 
And hale you hence for spending time amisse, 
(For death is sin's reward, transgression's doome), 
So when thou dies thou shalt be sure of this, 
To have accesse unto the marriage-room, 
And for thy tombe, in stead of ivorie. 
Marble or brasse, shall vertue cover thee. 



LVIII. 
HENRY PEACHAM. 



PSALMI DAVIDICI. 

To sundrie keies doth Hilarie compare 
The holy Psalmes of that propheticque king, 
'Cause in their natures so disposed they are, 
That, as it were, by sundry dores they bring 
The soule of man, opprest with deadly sinne, 
Vnto the throne where he may mercy winne. 

For wouldst thou in thy Saviour still reioyce, 
Or for thy sinnes, with teares, lament and pray, 
Or sing his praises with thy heart and voice, 
Or for his mercies giue him tliankes alway? 
Set David's Psalmes a mirror to thy mind, 
But with his zealc and heavenly spirit wind. 



PENITENTIA. 
There sits Repentance, solitarie, sad, 
Herselfe beholding in a fountaine cleare. 
As greening for the life that she hath lad ; 
One hand a fish, the other birch doth beare. 
Wherewith her bodie she doth oft cliastize, 
Or fastes, to curbe her fleshly enimies. 

Her solemn cheare, and gazing in the fount. 
Denote her anguish and her griefe of soule, 
As often as her life she doth recount. 
Which conscience doth with howerly care enroule. 
The willoe greene she most delights to weare, 
Tells how her hope shall overcome disjiaire. 



VITA TOT A DIES VNUT. 273 



VITA TOTA DIES VNUT. 

Of all our life behold the very summe, 
Which, as this flower, continues but a day ; 
Our youth is morne, our middle age is come 
By noone, at night as fast we doe decay 
As doth this lillie, flowring with the sunne, 
But withred ere his race be fully runne. 

Wiierefore our life's resembled to a shippe, 
Which passeth on, though we do what we please ; 
A shade, a flower that euery frost doth nippe, 
I A dreame, a froatli, a waue vpon the seas, 
I Which hath awhile his being, till anon 
I Some else intrude, and liee's forgot and gon. 



[jAMES I. POETS.] 18 



LIX. 
SAMUEL DANIEL. 



LINES, 

From " The Tragedie of Philotas." 

With what strange formes and shadowes ominous 
Did my last sleepe my griev'd soul intertaine ! 
I dreamt, yet O, dreames are but frivolous ; 
And yet 1 le tell it, and God graunte in vaine. 
Me thought a mighty hippopotamus, 
From Nilus floting, thrusts into the maine, 
Upon whose back a wanton mermaid sate, 
As if she rul'd his course and steer'd his fate ; 

With whom t' incounter forth another makes, 
Alike in kind, of strength and poure as good, 
At whose ingrappling Neptune's mantle takes 
A purple colour, dyde with streames of bloud ; 
Whereat this looker-on, amaz'd, forsakes 
Her champion there, who yet the better stood ; 
But se'ing her gone, straight after her he hies, 
As if his hart and strength laye in her eies. 

On followes wrath, upon disgrace and feare. 
Whereof th* event forsooke me with tlie night ; 
But my wak'd cares gave me these shadowes 

were 
Drawne but from darknes to instruct the light ; 
These secret figures Nature's message beare 
Of comming woes, were they deciphered right ; 
But if as cloudes of sleepe thou shalt them take. 
Yet credit wrath and spiglit, that are awake. 



LINES. 275 

Prevent ^reat spirit tiie tein})est tliat begin, 
If lust unci thy ambition have lelt way 
13ut to looke out, and have not shut all in, 
To stop thy iudgment from a true survay 
Of thy estate; and let thy harte within 
Consider in what danger thou dost lay 
Thy life and mine, to leave the good thou hast. 
To follow hopes with shadowes ou'rcast. 

Come, come away from wrong, from craft, from 

toile ; 
Possesse thine owne witli right, with truth, with 

peace ; 
Breake from these snares, thy iudgment unbeguile. 
Free thine owne torment, and my griefe release. 
But whither am I carried all this while ? 
Beyond my scope, and know not when to cease 
Words still with my increasing sorrowes grow; 
1 know t'have said too much, but not ynow. 

Wherefore no more, but onely I commend 
To thee the hart that's thine, and so I end. 



18—2 



LX. 
THOMAS SCOT. 



AQUIGNISPICIUM. 

God bends his bow, but shoots not : see it stands 
As if the stift'e string were in man*s owne hands ; 
For God first plac'd it so, that man might know 
How prone to peace he is, to war how slow. 
That couenant which he made with Noah he keeps. 
His mercy ever wakes, his justice sleeps ; 
And though our sins a second deluge craves, 
Hee'l drench the world no more in those salt waves. 
" What hurt from heauen fals, first from the earth 

proceeds, 
"And man's misfortunes springs from man's mis- 
deeds ;" 
Misdeeds that from ourselves, fi'iends, country, 

come. 
And where they shall on all, light but on some. 
The snow, haile, raine, are by the sun's pure beams 
Exhal'd from standing marshes, whose streames 
Infect the ayre with foggy mists, and then 
Are bottled up in clouds for sinfull men ; 
And for man's good in season they distill, 
Or out of season, to amend his ill : 
The plagues we fecle fall at the head and foot 
Are shafts against God our hands first upward shoot. 

Presumptuous sins, in country and at court, 
Greatnesse and grace, and favour, do support. 
The pulpit flatters ; justice sits and smiles, 
Making a gainefuU skill of ling'ring wiles : 



AQUIGNISPICIUM. 277 

"Who hath great friends lives free, and wantctli 

faults ; 
*' But witliout friends the upright innocent haults." 
Vice now jjrovides us raynient, nieate and drinke, 
So how t' increas't, not how to curh't, we thinke. 
Old men waxe impudent, lascivious, wilde — 
That fits them best which scarce becomes a childe. 
Young men are stubhorne, disobedient, stout, 
And rule and teach, even from the swathing clout; 
They all things know, and can, but (what they 

ought) 
Themselves and vertue — these they never sought. 
Fashions from Spain, France, Germanic, and Rome, 
And Turkic too, with their religions come ; 
So they are suited fjiyre from top to toe, 
And each new suite in a new faith they goe. 
Matrons that are not dead nor yet alive. 
But betwixt both, in some part vegetive, 
Crowne their smooth scalps with haire, which now 

makes brave 
A second mistris, ready for the grave. 
Young maids (that go for such) are mothers known, 
And such as should be none, are virgins showne. 
O Modesty, where dwel'st thou ? Womanhood 
Is scarce by our high English understood : 
Vice grows so common, that it is far more 
Opprobrious to be chaste than be a whore. 
All things are out of order ; lawes are made 
Strong means not to defend, but to invade. 
Then why should we limit the sea, or fire. 
Without their bounds, and not our owne desire ? 
Southward, th' Armado, and the fleetes of Spaine, 
(Oft beaten) ^ seeme to threaten us againe ; 



' Ann. Dom. 1588. 



278 THOMAS SCOT. 



And east and west' the seas would meet, we see, 
But that (0 wonder !) northward blest we bee. 
The want of water was the cause before 
Those huge-built hulkes could not approach our 

shore, 
Who came resolv'de of conquest, and did stand 
As if they meant to beare away our land. 
Poor He, so small thou wert, and they so great, 
Too scant a sea for them that was thy seat ; 
But had they staide till now, now might they ride 
On the swolne waves at ease in all their pride, 
And into every haven their bold ships stere. 
As if no sands, barres, shallowes, had been there. 
We know, whens'ere they come, God can provide 
Such seas so high, so uncontrol'd a tide. 
Able, without their envie or their ayde. 
To bury us : for see how he hath layd 
Our workes all levell — draines, dykes, sluces, banks, 
Fields, pastures, gardens, mannors, farmes, and 

franks ; 
With man their owner, and what man doth feed. 
Are buried with a sea of teares indeed. 



' The seas broke in before West, now East. 



LXI. 
THOMAS RANDOLPH. 



AN ECLOGUE, 

(occasioned by two doctors disputing I'PON 
PREDESTINATION. ) 

Coridon. 

Ho I jolly Tliirsis, whither in such haste ? 
Is't for a wager that you run so fast ? 
Or, past vour hovvre, belowe yon hawthome-tree 
Doth longing Galathoea looke for thee ? 

Thirsis. 
No, Coridon ; I heard young Daphnis say, 
Thenot hath challeng d Colin Clowt to-day, 
Who best shall sing of shepherd's art and praise : 
But hark ! I heare them ; listen to their laies. 

Thenot. 
Colin doth reade : what meanes this mystique 

thing ? 
An ewe I had two lambes at once did bring, 
The one black as jet, the other white as snowe ; 
Say, in just Providence, how it could be soe. 

Colin. 

Will you Pan's goodnesse therefore partiall call, 
That might as well haue giuen you none at all ? 

Thenot. 
Were they not both yeaned by the selfe-same ewe ? 
How could they merit, then, a different hue ? 
Poor lamb, and could' st thou, yet, alas, unborne. 
Sin to deserve the ^\.\\\i of such a scorne ? 



280 THOMAS RANDOLPH. 

Thou hadst not yet fowld a religious spring, 
Nor fedd on plots of hallowed grass, to bring 
Staynes to thy fleece ; nor browz'd vpon a tree 
Sacred to Pan or Pale's deitie. 
The gods are ignoraunt, if they not foreknow, 
And, knowing, 'tis uniust to vse thee so. 

Coli7i. 

Thenot, with me contend, or Coridon ; 
But let the gods and their high wills alone : 
For in our flocks that freedome challeng wee, — 
This kid is sacrifiz'd, and that goes free. 

Thenot. 

Feed where you will, my lambs ; what boots it us 
To watch and water, drive and fl'old you thus : 
This on the barren mountaines flesh can gleane. 
That fedd in flowry pastures will be leane. 

Colin. 

Plowgh, soaw, and compass, nothing boots at all. 
Unless the dew upon the tilths doe fall : 
So labour, silly shepherds, what we can, — 
All 's vain, unless a blessing drop from Pan. 

Thenot. 
Doatard : you fowle on Pan's omniscience fall — 

Colin. 
And you his goodnes into question call. 

Thirsis. 

Ffy, shepherds, fy ; while you these strifes begin. 
Here creeps the woolf, and there the fox gets in ; 
To your vain piping on so deepe a reed 
The lambkins listen, but forget to feed. 



u 



AN ECLOGUE. 281 



It gentle swaines befitts of loue to sing ; 
How loue left lieauen, an^l lieauen's iuiinortall King, 
His co-eternall Father ; oh ! admire : 
Loue is a son as auncient as his sire ; 
Hys mother was a virgin ; how could come 
A birth so great, and from so chast a womb ? 
His cradle was a mangre : shepherds, see, 
True faith delightes in pure sinijilicitie. 
Deepe sages by a star his mansion sought, 
Poore swaines by his own liarbingers were brought. 
He pressed no grapes, nor prunde the fruitfull vine ; 
Nor did he plowgh the earth, and to his barne 
The haruest bring, nor tliresh and grinde the corne. 
Without all these, Loue could supply our need, 
And with fiue loaues fiue thousand hungry feed. 
More wonders did He ; for all which suppose 
How was He crowned, — with lillies or the rose. 
The winding ivy or the glorious bay. 
Or mirtle, with the which Venus, they say, 
Girt her proud temples? Shepherds, none of them; 
But wore, poor soule ! a thorney diadem. 
Feete to the lame He gave, with which they run 
To work their surgeon's last destruction : 
The blind from him had eies, but use that light 
Like basiliscks, to kill him with their sight. 
Lastly, He was betrai'd — (oh ! sing of this) — 
How Loue could be betrayed — 'twas with a kis : 
And then his inocent hand and guiltless feete 
Were nail'd vnto the crosse, striving to meete. 
In his spread armes, his spowse : so mild in show. 
He seemed to court the embraces of his foe. 
Through his pierced side, through which a spear 

was sent, 
A torrent of all-flowing balsam went. 
Run, Amarillis, run : one drop from thence 
Cures thy sad soule, and driues all anguish hence. 



282 



THOMAS RANDOLPH. 



Go, sun-burnt Tliestilis, goe and repaire 
The beautie lost, and be againe made faire. 
Love-sick Aminsas, get a philtrum here, 
To make thee lovely to thy truly deere : 
But, coy Sycoris, take the pearle from thine, 
And take the blood-shot from Palaemon's eyne ; 
Wear this an amulet 'gainst all syrens' smiles. 
The sting of snakes, and tears of crocodiles. 
Now Loue is dead; — oh 1 no, He neuer dies ; 
Three days He sleepes, and then againe duth rise, 
(Like fair Aurora from the easterne bay). 
And with his beames driues all our clouds away. 
This pipe vnto our flocks, this sonnet get : 
But, loa 1 I see the sun ready to set. 
Good night to all ; for the great night is come : 
Flocks, to your foldes, and, shepherds, hye ye home. 
To-morrow morning, when we all haue slept, 
Pan's cornets blowes, and the great sheepshear's 
kept. 



I 



LXII. 
EDMOND GRAILE. 



JACOB GOING DOWN INTO EGYPT. 

Old laacob, and his sons also, 

Were pinch'd with penurie, 
Wherefore hee charged them to goe 

And food in Egypt buy. 

They went with griefe, and bought in feare, 
Not dreaming of their brother; 

Nor did he countenance them beare 
More kind then any other: 

Till when they came to him againe. 

Affection was so great, 
He could no longer it containe 

Within his breast for heate. 

With weeping eye and joyfull tongue 

Hee then did plainely tell 
Hee was their brother Joseph, whom 

To Egypt they did sell. 

The joy of either was so much 
That neither now could beare it; 

Their sobbing passion was such 
That Pharaoh's house did heare it; 

Who, understanding what they were, 

Commanded presently. 
With charets, horse, and furniture, 

For laacob they should hie. 



284 EDMOND GRAILE. 



So hee, with all his family, 

Came thither out of hand, 
And, welcomed most louingly, 

Were plac'd in Goshen land. 

In Goshen land did laacoh see 

The fulnesse of his dayes. 
And in his Sonne's prosperitie 

His fill of earthly ioyes : 

But solemnly before his death 
Hee blest his sonnes each one ; 

And Joseph eke gaue vp the breath 
Ere many yeeres were gone. 

Now when these fathers both were dead, 
And still their seed did grow, 

There rose a Pharaoh in his stead, 
That did not Joseph know. 

Hee, tyrant-like, with heavy hand 
Of bondage prest them downe, 

And gaue the midwiues strait command 
The males to kill or drowne. 



lAIII. 
WILLIAM DRUMMOXD. 



AN HYMN OF TRUE HAPPINESS. 

Amidst the azure cleare 

Of Jordan's sacred streanics, 
Jordan, of Libanon the offspring deare, 

When zephires flowres vnclose, 

And sunnc sliines witli new bcames, 
With graue and statelie grace a nymphe arose. 

Vpon licr liead shee ware 

Of amaranthes a crowne ; 
Her left hand palmes, her right a brandon^ beare. 

Vnvail'd skinne's whitenesse lay, 

Gold haires in curies hang downe, 
Eyes sparkled ioy, more bright than starre of day. 

The flood a throne her rear'd 

Of wanes, most like that heauen 
Where beaming starres in glorie tume ensphear'd : 

The air stood calme and cleare, 

No sigh by windes was giuen ; 
Birdes left to sing, beards feed, her voice to heare. 

'■'■ World-wand'ring sorrie wights, 

Whom no thing can content. 
Within these varying lists of dayes and nights 

Whose life, ere known amisse, 

In glittering griefes is spent, 
Come learne," said shee, "what is your choictst 
blisse; 

* Torch. 



286 WILLIAM DRUMMOND. 

" From toyle and pressing cares 

How ye may respit finde, 
A sanctuarie from soule-tliralling snares, 

A port to harboure sure, 

In spite of wanes and winde, 
Which shall, when times' houre-glass is runne, 
endure. 

" Not happie is that life 

Which yee as happie hold : 
No ; but a sea of feares, a field of strife, 

Charg'd on a throne to sit, 

With diademes of gold, 
Preseru'd by force, and still obseru'd by wit. 

" Huge treasures to enioy, 

Of all her gemmes spoyle Inde, 
All Seres' silke in garments to imploy, 

Deliciouslie to feed, 

The phoenix' plumes to finde 
To rest vpon, or decke your purple bed ; 

" Fraile beautie to abuse, 

And, wanton Sybarites, 
On past or present touch of sense to nmse; 

Neuer to hear of noise 

But what the ear delites, 
Sweet musick's charmes, or charming flatterer's 
voice. 

" Nor can it blisse you bring, 

Hidde nature's depthes to know. 
Why matter changeth, whence each forme doth 
spring ; 

Nor that your fame should range, 

And after-worlds it blow 
From Tanais to Nile, from Nile to Gange 



AN HTMN O^ TRUE HAPPINESS. ' 287 



** All tlicse haiio not the povvre 

To free the niincle from teares, 
Nor hiddeous horror can allay one howre, 

When Death in stealthe doth glance, 

In sickness kirke or yeares, 
And wakes the soule from out her mortall trance. 

*' No ; but blest life is this : 

With chaste and pure desire 
To turne vnto tlie load-starre of all blisse, 

On God the minde to rest, 

Burnt vp with sacred fire, 
Possessing him, to bee by him possest ; 

" When to the baulmie east 

Sunne doth his light imparte, 
Or when he diuetli in the lowlie west 

And rauisheth the day, 

With spotlesse hand and hart. 
Him cheerefullie to praise, and to Him pray ; 

" To heed each action so 
As euer in his sight, 
More fearing doing ill than passiue woe ; 
Not to seeme other thing 
Than what yee are aright ; 
\er to doe what may repentance bring : 

" Not to bee blowne with ])ride, 

Nor mou'd at glorie's breath, 
Which, shadow-like, on wings of time doth 
glide ; 

So malice to disarme, 

And conquer hastie wrath. 
As to doe good to those that worke your harme : 

** To hatch no base desires. 
Or gold or land to gaine, 
Well pleased with what by vertue one acquires ; 



288 WILLIAM DRUMMOND. 

To haue the wit and will 
Consorting in one straine, 
Than what is good to haue no higher skill : 

" Neuer on neighbour's well 

With cockatrice's eye 
To look, nor make another's heauen your hell ; 

Nor to be beautie's thrall ; 

All fruitlesse loue to flie. 
Yet louing still a loue transcending all, — 

" A loue, which, while it burnes 

The soule with fairest beames, 
To that vncreatde Sunne the soule it turnes. 

And makes such beautie proue 

That, if sense saw her gleames. 
All lookers-on would pine and die for loue. 

" Who such a life doth Hue 

Yee happie euen may call. 
Ere ruthlesse Death a whished end him giue ; 

And after then, when giuen, 

More happie by his fall, 
For humane's earth enioying angels' heauen. 

" Swift is your mortall race. 

And glassie is the field ; ^^ 

Vaste are desires not limited by grace : ^^ 

Life a weak tapper is ; ^^ 

Then while it light doth yeeld, 
Leaue flying ioyes, embrace this lasting blisse." 

This when the nymph had said. 

She diu'd within the flood, 
Whose face with smyling curies long after staid ; 

Then sighes did zephyres presse, 

Birdes sang from euerie wood. 
And ecchoes rang — " This was true happinesse." 



HUMAN FRAILTY. , 289 

HUMAN FR.\ILTY. 

A GOOD that neuer satisfies tlie niinde, 

A beautie failing like the Aj)rile flowres, 

A sweete with floods of gall that rmines combin'd, 

A pleasure passing ere in thought made ours, 

A honour that more fickle is than winde, 

A glorie at o})inion's frovvne that lowres, 

A treasurie which banckru})t time deuoures, 

A knowledge than graue ignorance more blinde, 

A vaine delight our ecpiallcs to command, 

A style of greatnesse in effect a dreame, 

A swelling thought of holding sea and land, 

A seruile lot deckt with a pompous name, — 

Are the strange endes we toyle for heere below, 

Till wisest death make vs our errores know. 



FOR THE PRODIGAL. 

I COUNTRIES changed, new pleasures out to finde. 
But, ah ! for pleasure I did find new paine : 
Enchanting pleasure so did reason blinde. 
That father's loue and words I scom'd as vaine. 
For tables rich, for bed, for following traine 
Of careful seruants to observe my minde : 
These heards I keep my fellowes are assign'd, 
Rocke is my bed, and herbes my life sustaine. 
Now while I famine feele, feare worser harmes. 
Father and Lord, I turne ; thy loue, yet great, 
My faults will pardon, pittie mine estate. 

This, when an aged oake had spred its armes. 
Thought the lost childe, while as the heardes he led, 
Not far off" on the ackornes wilde then fed. 



[jAMES 1. POEIS.] 



19 



290 



WILLIAM DRUMMOND. 



THE BLESSEDNESS OF FAITHFUL SOULS 
BY DEATH. 

Let vs each day inure ourselues to dye; 

If this, and not our feares, be truHe death, 

Aboue the circles both of hope and faith, 

With faire, immortall pinniones to flie : 

If this be death, our best part to vntye, 

By running the iaile from lust and wrath. 

And everie drowsie languor heere beneath. 

Is turning deniz'd citizen of skie, 

To haue more knowledge than all books containe, 

All pleasures euen surmounting wishing povv're, 

The fellowship of God's immortall traine, 

And these that time nor force shall e'er deuoure : 

If this be death, what ioy, what golden care 

Of life can with deathe's ouglinesse compare ? 



PROVIDENCE. 

Of this fair volumne, which wee World doe name, 
If we the sheetes and leaues could turne with care. 
Of him who it corrects, and did it frame. 
Wee cleare might read the art and wisedome rare ; 
Finde out his power, which wildest pow'rs doth 

tame. 
His prouidence extending euery where. 
His iustice, which proud rebels doth not spare, 
In euery page, no period of the same : 
But sillie wee, like foolish children, rest 
Well pleased with coloured velumne, leaues of gold, 
Faire dangling ribbones, leaning what is best. 
Of the great writer's sense ne'er taking hold ; 
Or if by chance we stay our mindes on ought. 
It is some picture on the margine wrought. 



LXIV. 
JOHN BULLOKER. 



THE ANOINTING OF OUR SAVIOUR. 

Whilst at Bctliania lie, 
Receiued in Simon's house, doth there remaine, 
A woman, by him late from sinne set free, 
Doth come, her louinji: Lord to entertaine, 
Bringing a boxe of ahibaster faire, 
Fill'd with an ointment, costly, sweet, and rare. 

O Love ! sole life of peace, and death of strife. 
Strong knot to tye, sweet vnion of consent ; 
Thought's purity, faire mappe of angels' life, 
Heauen's new-made liuery, nurce of all content; 
How true it is the world of thee doth say, 
That whoso loues can brooke of no delay ! 

This curious boxe she breaks, and quickly powres 
This precious liquor on her Saviour's head, 
Whose sweet-distilling drops full mainly showres 
Adowne his neck, and on his garments shed. 
Refining all the ayre neere which they fell 
With fragrant odour of their pleasing smell. 

But enuious malice soon occasion finds 
This woman's godly meaning to reproue ; 
Some standers-by do murmur in their minds, 
As discontent to see such zealous loue : 
His owne disciples, too, tliat sate at bord. 
Do grudge such cost bestow'd vpon their Lord. 

Wby need this needlesse waste be made, say they, 
Of what was worth three hundred pence at least ? 

19—2 



2.92 JOHN BULLOKER. 



It better had bin sold, and giuen away 
To poore for almes against this holy feast: 
Tis pitie such sweet oyle, so dearley bought, 
With idle vaine expence should come to nought. 

Thus they : but Christ, that sought to saue his foes, 
Forgets not now to helpe a friend at need ; 
He soon perceiues the grudging thoughts of those 
That were mislikers of this woman's deed. 
And mildly doth rebuke them for their sinne,^ 
With praise of her that did the worke begin. 

O why should you, whom I have chose for mine. 

Against your louing Lord offended be? 

Why should your murmuring hearts with spite 

repine 
At her whose faith wrought this good worke on 
me? ,. 
Take heed, this lesson was first learnt at hell, 
To grudge at grace, and enuie doing well. 

The poore may be relieued when you will, — 
No want of them the earth doth euer find ; 
But me you shall not haue amongst you still : 
The work's now done that heauen had erst assign'd; 
And she that knew I shortly hence must go, 
Against my buriall did this cost bestow. 

Of truth, therefore, I say, in each place where 
The world's redemption shall be preacht or taught, 
This woman's zeale shall be related there. 
In memory of what she now hath wrought : 

Great loue shall surely reape a great reward ; 

Heauen do's the hart, not outward shews, regard. 



LXV. 
FRANCIS BEAUMONT. 



A FUNERAL ELOGIE ON THE DEATH OF 
THE LADY PENELOPE CLIFPON. 

Since thou art dead (Clifton), the world may see 

A certain end of flesh and blond in thee ; 

Till then a way was left for man to cry, 

Flesh may be made so pure it cannot dye : 

But now, thy unexpected death doth strike 

With griefe the better and the worse alike ; 

The good are sad they are not with you there, 

The bad have found they must not tarry here. 

Death, I confesse, 'tis just in thee to try 

Thy power on us, for thou thyself must dye. 

Thou pay'st but wages, Death, yet I would know 

What strange delight thou tak'st to pay them so ; 

When thou com'st face to face, thou strik'st us mute, 

And all our liberty is to dispute 

With thee behinde thy back, which I will use. 

If thou had'st brav'ry in thee, thou wouldst chuse 

(Since thou art absolute, and canst controule 

All things beneath a reasonable soule,) 

Some look-for way of killing : if her day 

Had ended in a fire, a sword, or sea. 

Or hadst thou come hid in a hundred yeares 

To make an end of all her hopes and feares, 

Or any other way direct to thee 

Which Nature might esteeme an enemy, 

Who would have chid thee ? Now it shews thy hand 

Desires to cosin where it might command : 

Thou art not prone to kill, but where th' intent 

Of those that suffer is their nourishment ; 



294 



FRANCIS BEAUMONT. 



If thou canst steal into a dish and creep, 
When all is still as though into a sleep, 
And cover thy dry body with a draught 
Whereby some innocent lady may be caught. 
And cheated of her life, then thou wilt come 
And stretch thyself upon her early tombe, 
And laugh, as pleas'd to shew thou canst devoure 
Mortality as well by wit as power. 
I would thou hadst had eyes, or not a dart. 
That yet, at least, the cloathing of that heart 
Thou strook'st so spightfully might have appeared 
To thee, and with reverence have been fear'd : 
But since thou art so blind, receive from me 
Who 'twas as on whom thou wrought'st this tra- 
gedy. 
She was a lady who for publique fame 
Never (since she in thy protection came, 
Who sett'st all living tongues at large,) receiv'd 
A blemish : with her beauty she deceiv'd 
No man when taken with it ; they agree 
'Twas Nature's fault, when from 'em 'twas in thee 
As ever any did ; yet hath thy hate 
Made her as little better in her state 
As ever it did any being here, 
Shee liv'd with us as if she had been there. 
Such ladies thou canst kill no more ; but so 
I give thee warning here to kill no moe : 
For if thou dost, my pen shall make the rest 
Of those that live, especially the best. 
Whom thou most thirstest for, t' abandon all 
Those fruitlesse things, which thou wouldst have 

us call 
Preservatives, keeping their diet so. 
As the long-living poore, their neighbours, do : 
Then shall we have them long, and they at last 
Shall passe from thee to hear, but not so fast. 



LXVI. 
WILLIAM WARNER. 



HOW OUR RELIGION IS AUTHENTICALL. 

Of the chief e Points wherein we dissent from the 
Papists. 

CiiAP. Lii. OF THE Ninth Booke. 

Upon the onely Scriptures doth 

Our Church foundation lay, 
Let pattriarchs, prophets, gospell, and 

Th' apostles for us say; 
For soule and body we affirme. 

And all-sufficient thay; 
Yet ye adde canons, part corrupt, 

Some books ye quite denay. 
We by the Hebrew, and the Greeke 

(Their primer penores) expound 
Each Scripture, by the eldest clarks, 

Whom doubtful textes be found, 
Not by the Latin onely, as 

Ye would that all weare bound : 
So far forth yeat the Fathers and 

The councels we approve, 
As doe their expositions tende 

To sincere faith and love. 
Els fully Scriptures, in themselves. 

Explain themselves, say we, 
If searched with the humble spirit 

By which they written be : 
Through which is ofte from litrall speech 

A spirituall sence set free, 



296 WILLIAM WARNER. 



Upon which sence the Catholic Church 

Did, doth, and must agree. 
Nor doth our Church admit, at least 

Allow of those in her 
That teach not faith sincerely, winne 

To heaven, from hell deter. 
That witli new glozes tante the text, 

Or such as be unreade 
In that sweete promise of the seed 

Should brooze the serpent's head — 
The Alpha and Omega of 

All Scriptures, and whereby 
Of grace, through faith in Christ, our soles 

Revive, and sinne doth die : 
Our Church affects, how so effects, 

Such pure theologies 
And guides, and to our naturall prince 

Grants sole supremacie. 
God's covenant with the patriarchs, 

And extending to the seede. 
Us Gentiles to coequall, is 

A primate in our creede; 
And Christ we know the end of it; 

In circumcision's place 
Is baptisme ; and intirely we 

The tables two imbrace. 
Which God himselfe in Synia wrote. 

And gave to Moses then. 
To publish to the people, two 

Commandements in ten : 
Scriptures' idyea, crouched in 

Our love to God and men. 
Th' Apostles', Athanasian, Nice, 

And Bizain Creeds we hold 
Authentic, by the Holy Spirit 

In sacred Writ enrold. 



HOW OUR RELIGION IS AUTHENTICAL. 297 

One God] lead of Three Persons, 

In coecjuall Maiestie, 
Doe we beleeve ; of whom the Sonne 

Did for beleevers die, 
The onely ransome that redeemes 

From Sathan's tyrannie ; 
Even Christ, the Way, tlie Truth, the Life, 

Not crooked, glozed, fraile. 
But right for rule, in promise firme, 

Guerdon near to faile ; 
Who to reprove the bad, approove 

The good, and to assure 
The wav'ring, and against the divell 

Our safe tie to procure. 
Did giltless die, that we, lost soules, 

Might live, naught els did make, 
Tliat he, his Deitie adorn'd. 

Did humaine nature take. 
Nor, glorifide, disclaimes he us, 

Unlesse we him forsake. 
And what is fruitles faith, but such 

Apostasie ? and what 
Ensues apostasie, but to 

Be doomed dam'd for that ? 
No doctrine or traditions we 

Hold currant, save the same 
The Gospell, or the Apostles' Acts, 

Or pennes include or name. 
Baptisme, incorporating us 

In Christ, and us in one, 
Christ's misticall last Supper, whearein 

Signe his death is knowne, 
Be sacraments, except which twaine 

Doe we accept of none. 
By only Christ our advocate 

We to the Father pray. 



298 WILLIAM WARNER. 

Nor think we saints deceased can 

Our sutes to him convay; 
Hovvbeit, still most reuerently 

Of saints we thinke and say. 
Vnnecessarie burthens on 

Our Christian freedome laide, 
Contrarie thest, that beleefe and 

Vertuous life perswaide ; 
Yea, only faith doth iustice, 

Say we, of God's free grace 
By Christ: nor faith is idle, but 

Doth charitie imbrace. 
Who may, but will not helpe, doth hurt. 

We know ; and curious thay 
That, dribling almes by art, disband 

Wel-meant from wel-don's pay: 
And he that questions one's distresse, 

And doth not helpe indevour, 
Than he that sees, and nothing sayes 

Or eares, is less deceivour. 
Then hope we health when sinne is felt 

Repentantly in heart ; 
Adde then new life, and we to God, 

God doth to us conuart. 
Thus Peter vsed his keyes, nor thus 

Play popes S. Peter s part. 
For cieargie-men and laye our Church 

Hath godly discipline, 
Lawes worthie better than sometimes 

Are those the lawes define. 
Our princes in their policies 

And lawes do we obey ; 
Though God his cause they seeke to crosse, 

Yeat we for them do pray 
In patience, not peruerse attempts ; 

For better times we stay. 



— 1 
HOW OUR RELIGION IS AUTHENTICAt. 299 i 



Not as denide, but as devout, 

We doc and sliould abstaine 
From nieates cuen meet, the prouder flesh 

From siniie's excess to waine; 
Which should we skant, and yet bee dronke 

With lust, or like, were vaine. 
Saue also publique poUicie doth 

Publique sparing craue, 
In feast or diHerences of meates. 

No other keepe we have. 
Ahnes-deeds are workes of charitie 

We practively professe, 
And follow saints as they did Christ, 

And leave wheare they transgresse. 
Such and so much, as said, are we ; 

Forgive vs, God, if lesse. 
For godly though religion, prince 

And policie they are. 
Vet things, that of themselves be good, 

Abuse brings out of square ; 
And sundrie faultes in sundrie folks 

We sometimes must forbeare; 
Howbeit with best-gouerned states 

Our state may now compare. 



LXVII. 
LORD BACON. 



PSALM XC. 



O Lord ! thou art our home, to whom we fly, 
And so hast ahvaies beene from age to age : 
Before the hills did intercept the eye, 
Or that the frame was vp of earthly stage. 
One God thou wert, and art, and still shall bee ; 
The line of time it doth not measure thee. 

Both death and life obey thy holy love. 

And visit in their turnes as they are sent : 

A thousand yeares with thee they are no more 

Then yesterday, which, ere it is, is spent ; 

Or as a watch by night, that course doth keepe. 

And goes and comes vnwares to them that sleep. 

Thou carriest man away as with a tide ; 

Then downe swim all his thoughts that mounted 

high. 
Much like a mocking dreame that will not bide, 
But flies before the sight of waking eye. 
Or as the grasse that cannot term obtaine 
To see the summer come about againe : 

At morning faire, it musters on the ground ; 
At euen, it is cut downe and laid along ; 
And though it spared were, and fauour found. 
The weather should performe the mower's wrong : 
Thus hast thou hang'd our life on brittle pins, 
To let vs know it will not beare our sins. 

Tliou buriest not within obliuion's tombe 
Our trespasses, but entrest them aright ; 



PSALM XC. • 801 

Ev'n tliosc that are coiifeiuM in darknosse' wombe 
To thee appeare as (K)ne by broad (hiyliglit : 
As a talc told, which sometimes men attend, 
And sometimes not, our Hfe steales to an end. 

The hfe of man is tlireescore yeares and ten. 
Or, if tliat lie be strong, perhaps fourescore ; 
Vet all things arc but labour to him then. 
New sorrowes still come on, pleasures no more. 
Why should there be such turmoile and such strife 
To spin in length this feeble line of life ? 

But who considers duelv of thine ire ? 
Or doth the thoughts thereof wisely embrace ? 
For thou, God, art a consuming fire : 
Fraile man, how can he stand before thy face ? 
If thy displeasure thou dost not refraine, 
A moment brings all back to dust againe. 

Teach vs, O Lord, to number well our dales. 

Thereby our hearts to wisdom e to apply ; 

For that which guides man best in all his waies 

Is meditation of mortality : 

This bubble light, this vapour of our breath. 

Teach vs to consecrate to howre of death. 

Return vnto vs, Lord, and bal lance now 

With dales of ioy our daies of misery ; 

Help vs right soone, — our knees to thee we bow, 

Depending wholly on thy clemency: 

Then shall thy seruants both with heart and voice 

All the daies of their life in thee reloice. 

Begin thy worke, O Lord, in this our age, — 
Show It vnto thy seruants that now Hue ; 
But to our children raise It many a stage. 
That all the world to thee may glory glue: 
Our handy worke likewise, as frultfuU tree, 
Let it, O Lord, blessed, not blasted, be. 



LXVIII. 
JOHN TAYLOR. 



LINES, 

From " The Several! Seiges, Assaults, SacJcinffs, and Finall 

Destruction of the Famous, Ancient, and memoriable 

Citty of Jerusalem.^' 

The Justice, Mercy, and the Might, I sing. 
Of heav'ns iust, merciful. Almighty King ; 
By whose fore-knowledge all things were elected, 
Whose power hath all things made & al protected, 
Whose mercies'flood hath quencht his iustice flame, 
Who was, is, shall be one, and still the same ; 
Who in the prime, when all things first began, 
Made all for man, and for himselfe made man, 
Made, not begotten, or of humane birth, 
No sire but God, no mother but the earth ; 
Who ne'r knew childhood, or the sucking teate. 
But at the first was made man compleat ; 
Whose inward soule in God-like forme did shine. 
As image of the Maiestie Divine ; 
Whose supematurall wisdome (beyond nature) 
Did name each sensible and senceless creature. 
And from whose star-like, sand-like generation 
Sprung every kindred, kingdome, tribe, and nation. 
All people then one language spake alone, 
Interpreters the world then needed none ; 
There lived then no learned deepe, grammarians, 
There were noTurkes, no Scythians, noTartarians; 
Then all was one, and one was only all 
The language of the universall ball. 
Then if a traveller had gone as faiTe 
As from the Artick to th' Antartick starre, 



LINES. SO.S 

Tf lie fro!ii Boreas unto Auster went. 

Or from the Orient to tli' Occident, 

Which way soever he did tume or winde, 

lie liad been sure his countrv-nian to find. 

One hundred thirty winters since the flood 

Tlie earth one onely language understood ; 

Vntill the sonne of Cusli, the sonne of Cham, 

A proud, cloud-scaling towrc began to frame, 

Trusting that if the world again were drown'd. 

He in his lofty building might rest sound ; 

All future floods he purpos'd to prevent, 

Aspiring to heav'n's glorious battlement. 

l^ut high Jehovah with a pufl" was able 

To make ambitious Babel but a bable, 

(For what is man, that he should dare resist 

The great Almigh tie's jiovv'r, who in his fist 

Doth gripe eternity, and, when he please, 

Can make and unmake heav'n and earth & seas?) 

For in their expectation of conclusion 

He plag'd them all with sundry tongues' confusion. 

Such gibrish, gibble-gabble, all did fangle. 

Some laugh, »ome fret, all prate, all diff'erent 

wrangle ; 
One calls in Hebrew to his working mate, 
And he in Welch, Glovgh whee comrage doth 

prate ; 
Another gapes in English or in Scotch, 
And they are answered in the French or Dutch, 
Caldiac, Syriacke, and Arabian, 
Greeke, Latine, Tuscan, and Armenian, 
The Transilvanian, and Hungarian, 
The Persian, and the rude Barbarian : 
All these, and divers more than 1 can number, 
Misunderstanding tongues did there incumber. 



LXIX. 
HENRY ANDERSON. 



BIDDING THE WORLD FAREWELL. 

Deluding world, which hath so long amus'd, 
And with false shapes my dreaming soule 

abiis'd : 
Tyrannick court, where simple mortals buy 
With life and fortune splendid slavery ; 
Henceforth adieu; my goodly stock of years 
Laid out for that, I now lament with teares. 
Monarchs, who with amazing splendour glare, 
And favourites, who their reflections are, 
Both shine, 'tis true, but 'tis like glass they do, 
Brittle as that, and made of ashes too. 
The houre is set wherein they must disown 
The royal pom.p, the treasure, and the throne ; 
The dazzling lustre of majestic state 
Shall be extinguished by the hand of fate : 
Highness must stoop into the hollow grave, 
And keep sad court in a cold dampish grave. 
Beauty and jovial youth decayes apace ; 
Age still and sickness oft doth both deface : 
The favourite whom all adore and fear. 
Whose strength doth so unshakeable appear. 
Is but a towre built on flitting sands. 
No longer tiian the tempest sleepeth, stands : 
Nor can the calm of fortune long insure, 
Or monarch's favour crazy man secure. 
We moulder of ourselves, and soone or late 
We must resign beloved life to fate. 



BIDDING THE WORLD FAREWE^gL. 305 



From stately palaces we must remoue, 
The narrow lodging of a grave to })roue : 
Leave the f'aire train and tiie light-guilded 

room, 
To lye alone, benighted in the tomb. 
God only is immortal : man not so : 
Life to be paid u})on demand, we owe. 
Tiie rigid lawe of fate witii none dispence, 
From tlie least beggar to the greatest prince ; 
Tlie crooked scytiie tiiat no distinction knows, 
Monarchs and slaves indillerently mows. 
One day we 'd pity those we now admire, 
When after all the glory they ac(juire, 
When after all the conquests they have made. 
Fierce death their laurels in the dust hath 

laid. 



THE LAW OF CHRIST CONTRASTED WITH 
THE LAW OF THE WORLD. 

— i' til' world a hundred laws there be, 
Voide of all sense, but full of tyranny : 
Where foppish form our liberty restrains, 
And cripples us with false fantastick cliains. 
You must pretend to love whom you detest. 
Fawn on the great one when by him opprest ; 
With sneering praise guild o'er his blackest 

crimes, 
And all those humours which debauch the times : 
Mask your dis[)leasure with a smiling face. 
And swear you're highly pleas'd with his dis- 
grace : 
Triumph in show when you are overthrown. 
And all your discontents and griefs disown : 

f JAMl-.S I. POETS.] « 20 



306 HENRY ANDERSON. 



Cutting oif quite, with base uneasy art, 
The honest commerce of the mouth and heart. 
O shameful slavery of poor mankind, 
Unworthy of a man, or Christian mind ; 
Instead of Christ, whom we shouhl always owne. 
False tyranny and passion we enthrone : 
Cringing to those that from all virtue run, 
To serve a thousand masters in their turn. 
The crowded way of vice could never shew 
Such pleasure, which true virtue doth bestow. 
From innocence a native joy accrues. 
But wracking sorrow always guilt pursues. 
The ill man's never quiet, nor content ; 
The good is full of cheer, though penitent : 
His inward calm upon his brow appears. 
And halcyon like, no blustring storm he fears. 
Him all the turns of Fate's prepared to finde. 
Meets frowns and favours with an equal minde. 
If sickness warns him of approaching death, 
Or fortune robs him of his worldly wealth, 
It cannot his unshaken courage move : 
Who above earth hath plac'd in heaven his 

love, 
His health, his riches, and his sole delight. 
Is sure to serve his God with all his might ; 
And that great Master faithfully to trace 
Whose death was triumph, pleasure a disgrace. 



I 



THE BLESSEDNESS OF SERVING GOD, 307 



THE BLESSEDNESS OF SERVING GOD. 

Of monarchs he to Iliiii is great alone 

Wlio to himself becomes a little one. 

The only greatness which puore man can have 

Is to be here his Great Redeemer's slave. 

That king that doth not heav'n's just King obey, 

A traitor is himself to majesty. 

The simple shepherd who with chaste desires 

And cheerful innocence to heav'n aspires ; 

The honest, painful labourer, who sweats 

From morn to night, to get the bread he eats; 

If he serves heaven, is indeed more great 

Than kings, with all their pride and purple state. 

Thrice brave those monarchs who had darM to fly 

From all the alluring charms of majesty. 



Thrice blest are those who fled from being great, 
From courts, to suffer cottage's retreat : 
Heaven kindly doth their humble thoughts defeat, 
For greatness while they strive to shun, they meet. 
They are made great, and far more glorious kings 
By being just, than by all earthly things. 
Ah ! how we win in losing for our God, 
While heav'n is gained for a poore sorry clod 
Of earth : when for a short grief here endur'd 
We are of everlasting joyes assur d. 
Since for our pleasure we refuse our sense, 
We shall have millions for our recompence. 
Poore abus'd men, unlucky flocke that stray 
W ithout the shepherd, void of the right way ; 
Unthinking souls that perish with delight, 
Which all the tlireats of heav'n cannot affright. 



308 HENRY ANDERSON. 

For sure those pains which doth on sin attend, 
Pain which begins, but never must have end ; 
The immaterial fire that burneth still. 
But to their great misfortune cannot kill; 
The devil's dungeons, and all sorts of paine, 
Which human fortitude cannot sustain e, 
Might, one would think, men's brutish courage 

shake, 
And in our soules a noble fear awake. 



LXX. 
JOHN XORDEN. 



CUSTOME. 

For custome is not simply dangerous, 

Best actions may by custome waxe fane worse ; 

Yet custome is not simply dangerous, 

Though in the worser part suspitious. 

Of slender sparke ariseth mighty flame. 

But not vnless fit matter feed the same ; 

So wliere as Custome sets its foote to rise 

In ill, subdue her, lest she tyrannize. 

While she is young she may be managed, 

But growing olde she will be strong in head ; 

But ever weakest is she found to bee, 

When she should worke the mindes of men to mee. 

And when she frames her will to aide my foe. 

She's prest; the hag needs not constraine her goe; 

Yet not of her selfe-inclination, 

But as men's minds haue preparation. 

For though she seeme a princesse by her law. 

She is not absolute, but under awe ; 

She doth command the mindes she can surprise, 

(The seeming so), but not the truly wise : 

J3y nature men are proanest to doe ill, 

Without an outward prompter of the will ; 

And where she finds the will prepared so. 

She feeds affection as fond fi\nsies goe ; 

She offers still occasion of her aide, 

Stil building more upon the plot she laide. 

Thus custome alters, or begins anew, 
A nature which at first her self withdrew : 



310 JOHN NORDEN. 



Both good and ill she can transforme and make, 
As is the heart apt good or ill to take. 

She's agent both for that foiile hag and me, — 
Regards not much whose instrument she bee ; 
But that my foe hath her attendance most, 
She brings me only those that hag hath lost,' — 
Decrepite, feeble, aged, impotent, 
The wrong'd, oppressed, lowly, indigent, 
They that, by her despite and pleasing charmes. 
Have found her whiclicraft, and doe feel their 

harmes. 
Not yet by nature, but b' instinct of grace, 
That only light bewraies her vgly face. 

Flie her, her pleasures and false instruments. 
And set thy heart right on my rudiments : 
I am delite, my wayes and workes delite, 
My pleasures please not carnall appetite. 
Heroicke acts, that make men honorable, 
Are only sweet and most inestimable ; 
The rest are false, found mere scurrilitie. 
By which some loose both fame and dignitie ; 
But such as have me patronesse and guide 
Shall never fall, howso they seeme to slide : 
They shall withstand, and get the victorie 
Ouer that hagge and hellish companie ; 
Whose conquest farre exceedes the manli'st hand 
That swaies a sword, none stronger can withstand. 



LXXI. 
THOMAS TVKE. 



TO THE MEN OF RONH^, AS WELL 
LAIQUES AS CLERIQUES. 

Priest make their Maker Christ, yec must not 

doubt ; 
They eat, drink, box him vp, and beare about : 
Substance of things they turne ; nor is tins all, 
For both the signes must hold him severall : 

Hec's whole' ith' bread, whole ith' cuppe ; 

Theye eat him wliole, wliole they suppe ; 

Whole ith' cake, and whole ith' cuppe. 
This with vou all doeth goe for veritie ; 
To hold contrary is meer heresie : 
This is pure catholique, pure divine. 
And thus feast ye; he with his Christ, thou wilu 
thine : 

Without bread and wine, indeed, 

For this is your Roman creed ; 

Whom ye make, on him ye feed. 
Tlie bread and wine themselves away are gone, 
Shewes of them tarrv still, but substance none : 
They make their God, and they eat lum vp ; 
They swallow down his flesh, and biood v]) sup. 
They'll taste no flesh on frydayes (that's not good :•; 
But"'of their new-mad (u)d, and of his blood. 
And as the whale did Jonas, so they eat 
Him up alive, body and soule, as meat. 

> Vnder the shewes, as they talke, of bread and wine. 



312 THOMAS TUKE. 

As men eat oysters, so on him they feed, 
Whole and alive, and raw, and yet not bleed. 
This cookerie, voyd of humanitie, 
Is held in Rome for sound divinitie. 
And is not this strange to heare. 
That God, whom ye say ye feare, 
Ye should eat as bely-cheare ? 
The graver, painter, baker, even these three, 
Your priest have reason for to magnifie : 
Perhaps the baker thinks he merits more, 
Yet both advance their honor and their store ; 
For they, with their gentle feat, 
Help them to money and to meat, 
Making gods to begge and eat. 

And now, me thinks, 1 heare old Laban say', 
" See, they have stoln and bom my gods away," 
Me thinks, I heare and see that mountineer, 
Micha of Ephraim^, who did idols feare. 
Chiding with the Danits, for that they had 
Took's priest and gods away, which made him mad. 
Mee thinks I see the Philistins bereft 
Of their vaine gods, which they to David left^, 
And how that noble worthy made them bee 
Destroyed of his souljers presentlie^. 
Both men and beasts (a thing to be deplored) 
May bear away the things you adored : 
The things you worship with your heart and minde. 
Men like yourselves can burne,can melt, can grinde. 
Baruch's base things^ (a shame it is to thinck) 
Can marre the things ye worship, and make stinck. 

And is not this great folly, 

More than childish vanity, 

To dote on things so silly ? 

' Gen. xxxii. ^ j^^jg xviii. 2. 24. 3 2Sara. v. 21. 
* 1 Chron. xiv. 12. e Bar. vi. 12, 22. 



TO THE MEN OF IlOMt. 313 



The foolish lieathons were not all so mad, 
For they devoured not the gods they had : 
The wiser knew their vanities were wood, 
Or such like stuffe; not gods, nor flesh ami hlood". 
But yee, as if hewitcht, do count and call 
That poore thing God, Maker and Lord of all, 
\\ Inch is plaine hread, in suhstance very hread, 
Made of wheat-flower, ground with man's hand, 
and knead. 



^ Vid. liasil. school, in Psal. cxiii. Lactan. lib. n. cap. 2. 
Aug. in i*sai. cxiii. Cone. ii. ' 



LXXIL 
ELIZABETH MELVILL. 



LADIE CULROS' DREAM. 

Upon a day as I did morne full sore 
For sundrie things wherewith my soul! was grieved, 
My grietf increased, and grew more and more, 
I comfort fled, and could not be relieved ; 
With heaviness myne heart was sore mischieved, 
I loath'd my lyfe, I could not eat or drink ; 
I might not speak, nor look to none that lived. 
But mused alone, and divers things did think. 

This wretched world did so molest my mynd, 
I thought upon this fals and yron age. 
And how our hearts were so to vyce inclyn'd, 
That Satan seem'd most frightfully to rage. 
Nothing on earth my sorrow could asswadge, 
I felt my sinne most stronglie to increase ; 
I greiv'd the Sprite had want to be my pledge, 
My soull was plunged in most deep distress. 

All merriness did aggravate my payn, 

All earthlie joyes did still increase my wo ; 

In companie I could no way remayn, 

But fled resort, and still alone did ffo. 

My sillie soull was tossed to and fro 

With sundrie thoughts, which troubled me full sore ; 

I preass'd to pray, but sighs ore set me so, 

I could do nought but groan, and say no more. 

The trickling tears most abundantlye ran down, 
Myne heart was eas'd when I had mourn'd my fill : 



LADY CULROS' DREAM. . 31/) 



Then I bcsran my lamantation, 
Anil said, ^' () Lord ! liow lonpr is it tliy will 
That my poor sayncts shall be afflicted still { 
Alacc ! how Iouli: shall subtle Satan ra<Te ? 
Make haste, O Lord, thy promise to fulfill : 
Make haste to end my paynfull pilgrimage." 



LXXIIL 
S. A. GORGES. 

TO THE KLXGE'S MAIESTIE. 

When Tyme our styled yeare did end, 

And chaunge beganne your raigne, 
Then Time reft vs a soueraigne blisse, 

Which chaunge repay'de with gaine. 
Time now, by shortninge his owne time, 

Hath chaung'd the aged yeare : 
Yet in my long-borne zeale Time's chaunge 

Can make no chaunge appeare. 
But many a blessed chaunge of limes 

Heauens graunt your time may see ; 
That Time chaunge not your royall race, 

Till Time no more shalbe. 

Most humble and loyall, 

S. A. Gorges. 

Of many now that sounde, with hope's consort, 
Your wisdome, bountie,and peace-bless'd raygne, 

My skill is least, but of the most import, 

Because not school'd by favours, gyfts, or gaine ; 



316 



S. A. GORGES. 



And that which more approves my truthfull layes, 
To sweete my tunes 1 straine not flattrye's 
strynge ; 

But holde that temper in your royall prayse 
That longe I did before you were my kings; 

As one that vertue for it selfe regards, 

And loues his kinge more than his king's rewards. 



LXXIV. 
ROGER TISDALE. 



THE LAWYER'S PHILOSOPHY. 

Awake, my Muse, and from this slumb'ring trance 
Lightly arise, and on thy wings advance 
Thy nimble-soaring spirit to the sunne. 
Above the clouds that yet doe overrunne 
Thy bright-ey'd beauty ! Rowse away this dream, 
That eddies in thy braine, like to a stream. 
Whose giddy windings with plebeian stormes 
Turne and returne, begetting sundry formes. 
Wliat though my sighs like clouds do fill the aire, 
Thinke it not night : nor let us so duspaire, 
As fainting to lye down in sorrowes deepe. 
And there take up our last, eternall sleepe. 
No, no ; shake off the dewfalls of the night 
That dampe thy plumes, and soare into the light 
With cheerfull notes ; whilst 1 retir'd, sit still. 
Sighing a sad fabur then from my quill 
To thy more nimble warblings. Let not feare 
Distract our hopes : there's One above will heare, 



THE LAWYEk''s philosophy. 317 



If all the world neglect us. And for rumours, 
Breath'd from tlic vulvar, which are only tumours 
And swellini( water-bubbles, that together 
Doe rise and fall, according to the weather. 
Why should we feare them .' Let the inward man 
Looke upward, then doe Envy when she can. 
Set therefore now thv voice in tune to mine, 
In descant manner ; and again to thine 
rie tune a ground ; and both together we, 
Two parts in one, so sweetly will agree. 
As, whilst the rabble and rude nndtitude 
With their vncivill clamours doe intrude, 
Breaking all lau: and ri^j^hi, true musick's lore. 
We will in tune them out of tune deplore. 



LXXV. 
J. W. 



« 



EPITAPH ON ARCHBISHOP WHITGIFT. 

Pure saints, by heaven refyn'd from earthlie 

drosse, 
You duelye can esteeme your new increase ; 
But our soules' eyes are dymme to see the loss, 
Great prelate, wee sustaine by thy decease. 

We never could esteeme thee as we ought, 
Although the best of men did the best esteeme ; 
For hardly can you square a mortall thought, 
That of so great worth worthilie can deeme. 

This straight found cedar, new cut from the stemme, 
As yet is scarcelie mist in Labanus : 
This richer then the Wise King's richest gemme, 
New lost, as yet is scarselie mist of us. 

But yeares to come, and our deserved want, 
Proudlie foretold their bookes of eternities : 
But if my Muse were like mine argument, 
Theis lynes would outlive both their memories. 

For their best raaister-pieces doe contayne 

But pictures of false gods, and men's true faultes ; 

Whereas in my verse ever should remayne 

A true saint's praise, whose worth fills heaven's 

great vaults. 
Shyne bright in the Triumph Church, faire soule, 
That in the Militant has shyn'd so longe : 
Let rarest witts thy great deserts enrolle. 
I can but sing thee in a mournftdl songe, 
And wish that with a sea of teares my verse 
Could make an island of thy honour'd herse. 



LXXVI 
JOSHUA SILVESTER. 

LACHRLVLE LACHRIMARVM, 

A Funeral Elet/w upon the all-lamented Death of the 
all-admired (late) Prince. 

However short of other's art and witt, 
I kiiowe my powers for such a part unfitt ; 
And shall but lip^lit my candle in the sunne, 
To doe a work slialbe so better donne : 
Could teares and feares give my distractions leave 
Of sobbing words' a sable webbe to weave, — 
Could sorrowe's fulnes give my voice a vent, 
How would, how should my saddest verse lament 
(In deepest sighs, instead of sweetest songs,) 
This losse (alas !) which unto all belongs ; 
To all the godly now, and future, farr, 
To all the world (except s. p. Q. r.) : 
To all together, and to each a-part. 
That Hues, and loves religion, armes, or art: 
To all a})road, but to us most of all, 
That nearest stood to my high cedar's fall ; 
But more than most to mee, that had no prop 
But Henry's hand, and, but in him, no hope. 

O deerest Henry, heav'n and earth's delight I 
O cleerest beame of vertue's rising briglit ! 
purist spark of pious princely zeale ! 
O surest ark of justice' sacred weale ! 
O grauest presage of a prudent kinde I 
O bravest message of a valliant mynde ! 
O, all-admired, benign and bounteous ! 
O all-desired (right) ?anaretus ! 
Panaretus (all-vertuous) was thy name. 
Thy nature such ; such ever be thy fame. 



LXXVII. 
RICHARD ZOUCHE. 



THE DOVE. 



Take wing, my Muse, and, like that silent done 
Which o'er the world, new-bath'd, did hou'ring fly. 
The low-coucht seas, and high-plac't land above, 
Discerne with faitlifull, though with fearfull eye. 
That what both land and sea resounding ring 
We may to this All-maker's prayses sing. 

He who directs the sparrowe's tender flight, 
And sees him safely reach the heartlesse ground, 
Guide thee in all thy passages aright. 
And grant thy course be sure, thy resting sound, 
From Mount of Oliues, as from hill of bayes. 
Blest with the branch of peace, though not of 
praise. 

And you, whose care our floating houses yet saues 

From sinking in the deluge of despayre, 

Wliils't with poore feather'd oares she passe the 

waues 
Of this all- vulgar- breath'd, storme- threatening 
ayre,— 
Deare Lord, vouchsafe with patient looke t' at- 
tend 
Her flight's both trembling rise and humble end. 



RICHARD ZOUCHE. ,321 

THE WORLD. 

To our small Isle of Man some will compare 
Tlie world, tliat greater continent's liugh frame ; 
Nor much vnlike, eythcr's perfections are — 
Their matter and their mixture both the same : 
Whence man's alfection it so mucli allures, 
Sith greatest likenesse greatest love procures. 

But if their outward formes we looke vpon, 
Wee shall their figures divers plainly see ; 
For man's erected tall proportion 
To his heav'n-hoping soule doth best agree : 

Whereas the world, each way being framed 
round, 

The aptest forme for turning change hath found. 

Like Nature's rarist workmanship, the eye, 
The well-contrived instrument of seeing, 
WHiich, by exact and apt rotunditie, 
Performes his duty, and preserves his beeing; 
Of many curious circling spheres composed, 
And orbs within the orbs without inclosed. 



[jAMFS I. POETS.] 21 



LXXVIII. 
RAPHE CRANE. 



THE WORKS OF MERCY, BOTH CORPORALL 
AND SPIRITUALS 

Man of polluted lips, dar'st thou aspire 
So high a worke ? Call for celestiall fire ; 
Invoke some holy hand to guide thy pen, 
Some circumcized heart to teach thee : when 
Thou but conceiv'st a verse, sett'st doune a line, 
Sigh for thy state, weepe for those sinnes of thine, 
Those actuall ones, that justice have cal'd dovi^ne, 
And made th' Almightie, with an angrie frovvne. 
Fright blessednesse from thee, making thy life 
A vale of miserie, a den of strife. 
Scarce suff 'ring thee, in almost sixtie yeeres, 
See ought but dangers, mischiefes, debts, and feares, 
Laying on thy soule such heavinesse, such woe. 
As, but His mercy helpe thee, thou must goe 
(And speedily) unto a grave, forlorne, 
\V ayling,and wishing thou hadst nev'r been e borne. 

Alas ! but what am I, that he should daigne. 
In his abundant grace, to raise againe, — 
Me (groveling earth) that in confusion lies. 
Not daring to his throne erect mine eyes ! 

O my delected spirit, rouse thy selfe, 
Be not with cares (as worldlings are with pelfe) 
Wholly be-numm'd : thy God (benigne and good) 
Knowes ev*n for thee thy Saviour shed his bloud : 
Be thou but penitent, and he will smile. 
Wash thee with teares, and he with sacred oyle 



THE WORKS OF MERCY. * 323 



Will cheere thy lookes, and tliou shalt cleerely see 
The lovin<x kindnossc he intends to thee. 
The scales are falne already : I behold 
Divine infusion, (happy man,) am told 
That his blest Providence (never forsaking) 
Did first excite thee to this undertaking ; 
He bids thee write; relie on him, and send 
Tliy prayers up, and he will fairely end 
This thy designe, and thou shalt comforts finde, 
Both to thy travail'd life and troubled minde. 
Lead by this fiery-conduct (this darke night), 
Loe, thus 1 wander, (hopefull Israelite ) 



21—2 



LXXIX. 
THOMAS GOKIXS. 



HALLOWED BE THY NAME. 

Our Father, which doest sit on heauen's high 

throne, 
All praise and glory be to thee alone. 
Our Father — where or how shall we begin ? 
Thou high and pure, we deeply fraught with sin. 
Can we the organs be to sound thy praise, 
Which, chain'd to earthly clogs, can no way raise 
Our thoughts on high beyond our earthly leueil ? 
We cannot raise ourselues, but when we reuell 
In anticke pleasures, or in fond delights, 
Or when we feede our eyes with pleasing sights, 
When we to thee do pray, we feare like blockes ; 
When thou to vs dost speake,we stand like stockes. 
We have no sence of thy great loue or powre, 
Or that the zeale of thee should vs deuoure, 
We neede not feare. Wee vnderstand thee not ; 
No, nor our aelues : we are the staine and blot 
Of all thy workmanship ; for we recoile 
When we should doe our charge, and alvvayes soile 
Our best performance with some muddy thought. 
What shall we say, Lord ? we are worse than 

nought. 
From the first moouing spheare vnto earth's center 
All creatures faile thee not; but man dares venture 
To stray and wander, like a blazing starre, 
Foreshewing troubles, change, dearth, and warre. 
Thou lookest down from heaven, thy statefuU 

throne. 
And doing good thou didst behold not one. 



HALLOWED BE THY NAME. ,325 

Wc have our naturall corruption within, 
Wliicli since our tall is alwayes prone to sinne : 
We have the world witliout vs, and the diuell 
To draw and lead us to a world of euill. 
\\ e are not worth the silly widow e's mite ; 
How canst thou then in our poore gifts deliglit ? 
Tis true, O Lord, the widowe's gift was small — 
A lesser gift could not he giuen at all ; 
Yet was the mite accepted well from her, 
Which, being poore, did all slie had conferre. 
But we liave nothing good ; no, not a motion ; 
Nor one poore drop of grace but from thine ocean. 
And all our store is but meere pouerty, 
Except thine all-sutticient grace su})ply ; 
But so supplied, thou takest recreation 
In one good thought, or one eiaculation : 
Our poore endeauors and desires of good 
By thee as reall acts are vnderstood. 
Our Father, then, we may thee iustly call. 
Our Treasure, King, our Lord, our All in all. 
Let Three in One be ioyn'd in adoration, 
As Three in One were in the world's creation. 



LXXX. 
DOCTOR BROOKE. 



O' TEARS. 

Who would have thought there could have bin 

Such joy in tears wept for our sin ? 

Mine eyes have seen, my heart hath proved, 

The most and best of earthly joys, 

The sweets of love and being loved. 

Masks, feasts, and playes, and such like toyes ; 

Yet this one tear which now doth fall 

In true delight exceeds them all. 

Indeed, mine eyes at first let in 

Those guests that did these woes begin ; 

Therefore mine eyes in tears and grief 

Are justly drown'd : but that those tears 

Should comfort bring, is past belief, — 

Oh God, in this thy grace appears; 

Thou that mak'st light from darkness spring, 

Mak'st joyes to weep, and sorrowes sing. 

Oh where am I ? what may I think ? 
Help, help ! alass, my heart doth sink : 
Thus lost in seas of wo, 
Thus laden with my sin, 
Waves of despair dash in. 
And threat my overthrow. 
What heart opprest with such a weight 
Can chuse but break, and perish streight? 

Yet as at sea in storms men choose 
The ship to save, their goods to loose : 



O** TEARS. ^ 327 

So in this fearful storm, 
This chmjj^er to prevent, 
Before all hope be spent, 
rie choose the lesser harm ; 
My tears to seas I will convert, 
And drown my eyes, to save my heart. 

Oh God, my God ! what shall I give 
To thee in thanks i I am and live 
In thee, and thou didst safe preserve 
My health, my fame, my goods, my rent ; 
Thou makest me eat while others sterve, 
And sing while others do lament. 
Such unto me thy blessings are, 
As if I were thy only care. 

But, oh my God! thou art more kind, 
When I look inward on my mind : 
Thou fillest my heart with humble joy, 
With patience, meekness, fervent love 
(Which doth all other loves destroy), 
With faith (which nothing can remove), 
And hope assured of heaven's bliss ; — 
This is my state, — thy grace is this. 



LXXXI. 
THOMAS HEYWOOD. 



STANZAS, 

From " Troia Brittanica, or Great Britaine's Trot/." 

This vniverse, with all therein contained, 

Was not at first of water fashioned, 

Nor of the fire, as others oft haue feyned, 

Nor of the ayre, as some have vainly spred, 

Nor the foure elements in order train'd, 

Nor of vacuitie and atoms bred ; 

Nor hath it been eternall, as is thought 

By naturall men, that haue no further sought. 

Neither hath man in perpetuity bin, 
And shall on earth eternally perseuer 
By endlesse generation, running in 
One circuit, in corruption lasting euer: 
Nor did that nation first on earth begin 
Vnder the mid equator : some indeauour 
So to perswade, that man was first begunne 
In the place next to the life-giuing sunne. 

Neither was he of earth and water framed, 
Tempered with liuely heat, as others write ; 
Nor were we in a former world first named. 
As in their curious problems some recite. 
Others, more ripe in iudgement, haue proclaimed 
Man frarn'd of clay, in fashion exquisite, 
In whom were breathed sparkes of celestiall fire. 
Whence he still keepes his nature, to aspire. 



STANZAS. '329 

But this most glorious vniuerse was madt' 
Of notliin^^, — hy tho groat Creator's will : 
The ocean bouiideil in, not to inuado 
Or swallow vp the land ; so resteth still 
The azure firmament, to oucrshade 
]5oth continent and waters, which fulfill 
The Maker's word : one God doth sole extend, 
Without beginning, and shall see no end. 

That powerfuU Trinity created man, 
Adam, of earth, in the faire field Damaske ; 
And of his rib he Euah formed than. 
Supplying them with all things they can aske. 
In these first two humanity began, 
In whom confined Jehovah's six dales' taske. 
From Adam, then, and Kuah's first creation. 
It follows we deriue our British nation. 

Inspire me in this task, Ihoue's seede, I pray ; 
With Hippocrenes' drops besprinke my head, 
To comfort me vpon this tedious way, 
And quicken my cold braine, nigh dull and dead ; 
Direct my wandering spirits when they stray, 
Least foreen and forbidden paths they tread : 
My iourncy's tedious, blame not then my feares; 
My voyage dymes at many thousand yeares. 

Oh, giue me leaue from the world's first creation 
The ancient names of Britons to deriue. 
From Adam to the world's first invndation, 
And so from Noah to us that yet suruiue ; 
And hauing of Trove's worthies made relation, 
Your spurs the chariot of m.y Muse must driue 
Through all ])ast ages and precedent times. 
To fill this new world with my worthless rymes. 

Oh, may these artlesse numbers in your eares, 
Renowmed James, seem musically strung, — 



330 THOMAS HEYWOOD. 

Your fame, oh loue's-star'd Prince, spread euery- 

where, 
First giue my still and speechlesse Muse a tung; 
From your maiestike vertues, prised deare, 
The infant life of these harsh meeters sprung. 
Oh take not then their industrie in skorne, 
Who, but to emblaze you, had yet been vnborne. 

Nor let your princely peeres cold in disdaine 
To haue their auncestry stilde and inrolde 
In this poore register : a higher straine 
Their merits aske, since brazen leaues vnfold 
Their neuer-dying fame ; yet thus much daine, 
Not to despise to heare your vertues told 
In a plaine style, by one whose wish and heart 
Supplies in zeale his want both of skill and art. 

Times faithfully conferd the first inuention 
Of most thinges now in vse : heare you shall finde, 
Annex't with these, the vse and comprehention 
Of poesie, once to the goddes desceind. 
Suft'er our bluntnesse then, since our intention 
Is to good vse, sent from a zealous mind : 
If stones, in lead set, keep their vertues, then 
Your works the same, though blazde by a rude pen. 



LXXXII. 
PETER SMALL. 



LLXES, 

From "Man's .Vrtj/." 

Whilst one may labour, ami take paine to live, 

To idletiesse liis niinde let him not give ; 

Whilst one may have a thing, a thing tliat's offer'd 

liim. 
Let him not leave the thing which time hath pro- 

fer'd him : 
Whether it he jjreferment, art, or glory, • 
Health, wealth, or pleasure, wliicli are transitory. 
The man tluit may, and will not, mend his state, 
May not redresse it when it is too late. 
Time is so swift that none can stay his course, — 
Time is so strong that none can match his force : 
Like to a thiefc, Tyme stealingly doth haste ; 
No man can call time backe when Time is past : 
Time still describ'd in poets thus we finde. 
Bushy before, but very bald behinde. 
Even as the bee sucks bony out of thyme, 
So may a man sucke sweetnesse out of Time. 
Thyme is a sweete flower, Time a sweeter word, 
And more commodity doth farre aflbrd : 
But even as the spider poyson sucketh 
From that same herbe from whence the poore bee 

])lucketh 
The purest bony ; so the slothfull wight. 
That doth in nought but idlcnesse delight. 
Sucks sowre from sweet, sucks gall instead of bony : 
Time cannot be recall'd for love or money. 



332 



PETER SMALL. 



Time is as swift as tliought, — the swift'&t-vving'd 

swallow 
Cannot endure the flight of Time to follow : 
Time is of the Ubiquitaries' race, — 
Time's here, Time's there, Time is in every place ; 
Time is divided in a three-fold sum me, 
Time past. Time present, and the Time to come. 
Of present Time I presently intreat, 
For therein lyes the summe of my conceit ; 
For Time (once past) can never be recal'd, 
And therefore is he feyned to be bald : 
So Time to come, untill it present be, 
Is neither May, nor opportunitie. 
Prudence, Fore-care, and Diligence (they say. 
With fit occasion,) are the flow'rs of May ; 
And these in winter doe as faire appeare 
As in the summer-season of the yeere. 
Carelesnesse, Sloth, Excuse, and Time's delay, 
Witli Ignorance, are tearm'd the weedes of May; 
And these are neither sweet, or faire appeare, 
Neither in spring, nor yet in all the yeere. 
May may be fitly tearm'd (in my opinion) 
The mistris of the moneths, and Nature's minion, 
May, Nature's beauty, beautifying Nature, 
May, Nature's joy, delighting every creature. 
All Nature's impes she trimmes with colours 

gay. 
And glories her rich beauty to display, 
Decking the bosome of the earth with flowres, 
Nose-gayes for ladies and their paramours. 
In May the little buddes do sprout and spring. 
In May the little birds do chirpe and sing ; 
In May the earth is clad in gaudy greene, 
To entertaine and welcome sommer's queene. 
The winde doth whistle musicke to the leaves ; 
They dance for joy : thus ev'ry thing receives 



1,1 xKs. 333 
• 

Pleasure by Maye's approach, and true content, 

Antl (lotli rejoyce with jrencrall consent, 

And strive (in cnuihition) wlio shall he 

Most richly clad in Nature's livery; 

To entertaine the parragon of Time, 

Each thing is in his chiefest pomp and prime. 



LXXXIII. 
SANDS PENUEN. 



IXYON. 



Oh, if a man whose guilt speakes in his face, 
Whose sins exclude from all good hope of grace, 
May dare attempt, with blood-polluted hands, 
To touch thy pedestell, whereon there stands. 
Wrought by Divine art, such a world of glory, 
As to all worlds shall be an ample story , 
Then let Ixyan (rich in nought but shame, 
And all the adjuncts to a vast defame,) 
With teares petitionarie thee desire 
To purge his sins with thine immortall fire, 
Clense what's corrupt, make pure what is most 

fowle. 
And of my speckled make a glorious soule : 
The more my sin, the greater is my fame, 
If thou do purge it with thy hallowed flame. 
Will not yon christall-stellified gate 
Ope, and with milde aspect adorne my fate ? 
Heare me, dread love, or if thou wilt not heare. 
Yet take some notice of these penitent teares. 



S34 SANDS PENUEN. 

Could my tongue speak as loud as doth my sinne, 
With my shril praiers ere now th'adst rouzed bin ; 
Yet still lie pray, and with my dismall cries 
Fan ope thy glories curtaine, the blew skies, 
And, till my sinnes with mercie be commixt, 
A kneeling living statue here be fixt. 

At this th' appeased Heavens began to smile, 
And this great Deitie, that had all this while. 
With an attentive care, observed the prayers 
ixyon spent, his penitence and teares, 
(Prompted by pittie,) doth resolve once more 
To make Ixyon happier then before ; 
And for his kingdome's losse hee meanes to give 
A place of residence, where hee shall live. 



LXXXIV. 

J. F. 



LINES, 

From ^'ChrisVn Bloody Sweat. " 

This Man of men did in liis troubled spirit 
Into a streame of soft compassion melt 
His icyc blond, that frailty might inherit 
The sun of comfort, by the griefes he felt; 
Each drop of bloud he shed, he shed it then 
To wash a severall sin from severall men. 

Here saw he princes in the awful I throne 
Of eminencie, how wantonly they strove 
For thirst of glory, to protect alone 
Religious name, not for religious love ; 

Graceing the gracelesse, in whom grace was lost, 
Such parasites as knew to flatter most. 

For those he sweated bloud, that they whom Heaven 
Created gods on earth, should so prophane, 
By courses indirect and lawes un-even, 
Of will and sensuall lust, the law first drawne 
By that eternall royalty, who stood 
To watch their faults : for kings he sweated 
bloud. 

Here saw he such who under those were plac't 
In seates of greatnessc and commaundes of state. 
How fond in their madnesse they did wast 
Tlieir greatnesse in ambition and debate, 

Ayming not to suj)port, but scorne tlie good, 
By unjust force : for such he sweated bloud. 



836 J. F. 

Here saw he how m Moses' chayre there raign'd 
Scribes cloath'd in wool of lambes, and speaking 

well. 
But wolves in nature, so coruptly stayn'd, 
As if they were but messengers of hell ; 

Abusing unlearn'd soules and Levit's power, 
More ready then to cherrish, to devoure. 
Those whom the breath of God at first inspir'd 
To shine as lampes, and speake the heavenly sound 
With angels' tongues, were silent, if not hir'd ; 
More studyhig with the scriptures to compound 
Their own traditions ; and for those, indeed, 
In heavy droppes the sweat of Christ did bleed. 
Here saw he lawyers soberly engoun'd, 
Wanting the robe of justice ; not regarding 
The poor man's right, nor where the case was 

sound, 
But giving judgment as he felt rewarding; 

W hose tongue was bought against that side was 

weake. 
Most times as well to hold his peace as speake : 
For them he sweated bloud. And here he saw 
Intrusted jurisdiction over-sway 'd 
By partiall favour, above forme of law. 
Cold conscience, by which conscience was be- 
tray'd ; 
For those condemning, were condemn*d to much. 
As they condemn'd : he sweated bloud for such. 
Here saw he souldiers, toyling in the heat 
Of cruelty, not measuring the right 
Why they bore armes, but, to content the great 
And their own lawlesse hate, prepar'd to fight. 
For prey and spoyle adventuring to rent 
Their lives and soules : for those his bloud hee 
spent. 



LINES. 337 

Heere saw lie otliers that did keepe the sword 

Of office and autliority, in j)eace, 

Compacted in a knot, not to accord 

Or set at unity, strifes but increase ; 

Wounding or sparing with a watchfull hand. 
As some superiour person sliould commaund. 



[jAMES I. POETS.] 22 



LXXXV. 
WILLIAM LITHGOW. 



LINES, 

From " The Pilgrim's FarewelV 

This wortlilesse honour, that desert not reares, 
Is but as fruitlesse showes, which bloome, then 

perish : 
Where merite buildes not, that foundation teares. 
There's nought but trueth that can man's standing 

cherish : 
This great experience dayly now appeares. 
What one uphold es, another he downe casts, 
This gentle blood doth suffer many blasts. 

I smyle to see some bragging gentle-men. 

That clayme their discent from king Arthur great; 

And they will drinke, and sweare, and roare : what 

then ? 
Would make their betters foote-stooles to their 

feet, 
And stryve to bee applaus'd with print and pen ; 
And were hee but a farmer, if hee can 
Butkeepe an hound, — there's a gentle-man ! 

But, foohsh thou, looke to the grave, and learne 
How man lies there deform'd, consumed in dust ; 
And in that mappe thy judgement may discearne 
How little thou in birth and blood shouldst trust. 
Such sightes are good, — they doe thy soule con- 
cern e. 
Wer'st thou a kinglie sonne, and vertue want, 
Thou art more brute than beastes which desarts 
hant. 



LINES. , SS9 

And more, Taine worlde, I see thy pjeat trans- 
trression. 

Each day new murther, blood-slied, craft, and tliift, 

Thv lovdesse law, and lawlesse proude oppres- 
sion, 

Thy stirt'eneckt crew tlieir heads ovV saincts they 
lift, 

And, misregarding God, fall in degression : 

The widdow mournes, the proude the poore 

oppresse, 
The rich contemne the silly fatherlesse : 

And rich men gape, and, not content, seeke more. 
By sea and land, for gaine, run manie miles ; 
The noblest strive for state, ambition's glore, 
To have preferment, landes, and greatest stiles. 
Vet nev'r content of all, when they have store ; 
And from the sheeplieard to the king, 1 see, 
There's no contentment for a worldlie eye. 

O ! is hee poore, then faine he would bee rich ; 

And rich, what tormentes his great griede doth 
feele : 

And is hee gentle, hee strives moe hightest' touch; 

If hee unthrives, hee hates another's weele; 

His eves pull home what his liandes dare not fetch. 
A quiet minde, who can attaine that hight, 
But either slaine by griede or envie's spright? 

Man's naked borne, and naked hee returnes. 
Yet whiles hee lives God's providence mistrustes ; 
Hee gapes for pelfe, and still in avarice burnes ; 
And, having all, hath nothing but his lustes. 
Insatiate still, backe to his vomite turnes. 

Vilde dust and earth, belie v'st thou in a shadow, 
Whose high-tun'd prime falles like a new-mowne 
medow ? 

22 — 2 



340 WILLIAM LITHGOW. 

I grieve to see the world and worldling playing : 
The wretch, puft up, is swell'd with hellish griede ; 
The worlde deceives him with a swift assaying ; 
And as hee stands, hee cannot take good heede. 
But for small trash must yeelde eternal paying : 
And dead, another enjoyes what hee got, 
And spendes up all, whiles hee in grave doeth 
rot. 



LXXXVI. 
JOHN WEEVER. 



STANZAS, 

From "An Agnus Dei.^^ 

Now Pontius Pilate on the iudgment-seate, 
His wife sends to him, fairely to entreate 
That in no wise with Jesus he would mell, 
For in a sleep strange things to her befell 
Concerning him : he Jesus would haue quit, 
But none would grant which on the bench did sit. 
He puts al to the peoples choice: they choose 
Jesus for death, and Barrabas let loose. 
Prevailing not, then Pontious Pilate stands 
Before them all, took water, washt his hands, 
Appealing both to heuens and to the earth 
That he was guiltlesse of this iust man's death. 
Then answered the destraughted multitude— 
" Vpon us and our children bee his blood/' 



LXXXVII. 
CHARLES FITZGEFFREY. 



THE BLESSED BIRTH-DAY, 

CELEBRATED IN SOMK SANCTIFIKD MKUITATIONS ON 

the angki-s' anthem. 

Luke u. 14. 

Glory to God in the hijrhest, and on earth peace, good will 
towards men. 

Why should not we with joy resound and sing 
The blessed natals of our lieaveiily ^m^ ? 
Why sliould not we with mirth sakite the mom 
Of his birth-day by wliom we are new born i 
See how each creature in liis kind rejoyces, 
And shall not we lift up melodious voices .' 
Hark how the angels sing 1 — shall we be sad i 
The greatest good is ours — be we most glad. 
Hark how the star-enamel'd heavens rebound 
With echos of angelick anthems' sound ! 
It is for us that they those joyes expresse ; 
And shall not we shew forth some thankfulnesse? 
Joyn we in consort these sweet quires among, 
In sundry voices sing we all one song, 
Glory to God on high, on earth be peace, 
And let good- will towards Christians never 
cease. 



LXXXVIII. 
WALTER QUIN. 



YOUTH ADDRESSED BY VICE AND VIRTUE. 

Vice. 
Brave youth ! if to this vvoman, sterne and grim, 
Thou care doe give, and wilt her footsteps tread. 
In a most irksome way she will thee lead, 
With great turmoile and dangers manifold, 
In summer's parching heat and winter's cold, 
Through many a thorny steepe and craggy ground, 
Wherein no pleasing mates are to be found, 
But savage beasts and monsters fell, to whom, 
In end, a wofull prey thou shalt become. 
But if thou wilt resolve to goe with mee, 
In this my way, thou shalt be wholly free 
From all such toile and danger : passing still 
Through flowrie fields and medowes, where at will 
Thou maist most pleasant company enjoy, 
And all delightful sports without annoy. 

Virtue. 

To please thine eyes 
I use no curious art, without disguise 
True and unstain'd to be ; which to thy view 
Her inward falsehood and my truth may shew. 
As painfull, dreadfuU, dangerous, my path — 
Yea, and pernicious, she traduced hath ; — 
Her's vaunting to be pleasant and secure, 
And such as might all joy to thee procure. 
In both she a most shamelesse liar is ; 
For that my path, though painfull, leads to blisse 



YOUTH ADDRESSED BY VICE AND V1HTU|!. 343 

And glory : yea, the pains thereof are sweet, 
For tliat with solid inward joycs tlicv meet : 
Wiiereas lier way, though pleasant she it name, 
Leads to destruction, infamy, and shame. 



LXXXIX. 

SAMUEL ROWLANDS. 



A MORAL. 

He that performes not what he ought. 

But doth the same neglect, 
Let liim be sure not to receive 

The thinge he dotli expect. 
When once the tall and loftie tree 

Vnto the ground doth fidl, 
Wliy euery peassont hath an axe 

To hew his boughes withall. 
He that for virtue merrits well, 

And yet doth notliing claymc, 
A double kind of recompence 

Deserueth for the same. 

Acquaint me but with whom thou goest, 

And thy companions tell, 
I will resolue ihee what tiiou doest, 

Whether ill done or well. 
He knowes enougli that knoweth nought, 

If he can silence keepe : 
The tongue oft makes the heart to sigh, 

The eyes to waile and weepe. 
He takes the best and choycest course 

Of any man dotli live. 
That takes good counsel! when his friend 

Doth that rich iewell give. 



xc. 

ANONYMOUS. 



AN EXCELLENT SONG, 

WHEREIN YOU SHALL FINDE GREAT CONSOLATION FOR A 
TROUBLED MINDE. 

Ayme not too hie in things above thy reach, 
Be not too foolish in thyne own conceit ; 
As thou hast wit and worldly wealth at will, 
So give Him thankes that shall increase it still. 

Beware of pride, the mother of mishap. 
Whose sugred snares will seek thee to entrap ; 
Be meeke in heart and lowly minded still, 
So shalt thou God's commandments fulfill. 

Cast all thy care upon the Lord, and he 
In thy distresse will send to succour thee ; 
Cease not therefore to serue him eu*ry day. 
Who with His blood thy ransome once did pay. 

Driue from thy heart ill thoughts that may offend. 
Desire of God his Holy Spirit to send, 
Which will direct thy life into such a sort 
As thou thereby shall find ioy and comfort. 

Feare to offend his heavenly Maiestie ; 
Faith doth confirm true loue and loyaltie. 
Without which faith, as holy Scriptures say, 
No man to heaven can find the perfect way. 

Great is the Lord, and mercifull, doubtlesse, 
To those that with true zeale their faults confesse ; 
But unto those in mischiefe dayly runnes, 
He lets alone to taste what after comes. 



AN EXCELLENT BONO. 345 



Hope in the Lord, on liini repose thy trust, 
Serue him with fearc, whose iudgenients are most 

iust; 
Desire of iiim thy Hfe so to direct, 
That to thy soule he may have good respect. 

Iniure no man, but love thine enemie. 
Though to thy hurt, yet take it patiently, 
And think the Lord, although he suffer long, 
When time shall serve will soon revenge thy wrong. 

Keepe thou no ranckor hidden in thine heart, 
Remember well the word Christ did impart, 
That is, forgive offences ouer-past, 
As thou thyself wilt be forgiuen at last. 

Lay not thy treasure up in hoarding sort, 
But therewithall thy poore feed and comfort ; 
If thou cold water giue in Christ his name, 
Thrice double cold he will reward the same. 

Misorder not thy selfe in any wise ; 
In meat and drink let reason still suffice ; 
Moderate thy mind and keepe thy selfe content, 
So shalt thou praise the Lord omnipotent. 



XCI. 
JOHN HAGTHORPE. 



GOD'S BOUNTY ENLARGED. 

From '^Divine Meditations,'*^ Chap. XVIII. 

Oh that my Muse could on her nimblest wmgs 

Mount you aloft beyond the foggy aire, 
Past the reflection of all terrene things, 

And sublamate your soules to things more faire ; 
That, touching these terrestrial beauties, we 
Might rather heare think e why, than what 
they be ! 
First, what a spatious and maiestick hall. 

Full of officious seruants for your vse. 
Hath Heauen ordained to entertaine you all ; 
Wherein, if any want, 'tis but th' abuse 

Of foul excesse, whose surfets wasts the store 
That might supply the needies' wants twice o'er. 
With what a downie carpet hath he spread 

The flowerie earth to entertaine your feete, 
Where euery plant and flowre that shews his head 
Brings with it profit, wonder, and delight ; 
How many a pretty flie with spotted wing 
Vpon there slender stalke their canzons sing ! 
How many fruitfull champains feeding flocks. 

How many beautious forrests clad in greene. 
Where watery nimphes with soft embraces locks ; 
Such shady groues, as for true loue may seeme 
Fit chappels to the winged singers' layes. 
And burbling streames to chaunt true beau- 
tie's praise. 



god's bounty enlarged. 347 



Vet more, lie lo(l«xes in earth's secret vaines 

Ten thousanil things i)t' larre more valued prise ; 
And th' sea for pleasure and for vse conteines 
The choisest beauties, richest smells and dies : 
Thus hath our Maker for touch, tast, and smell, 
For eye and eare, puruey'd compleatly well. 
But man himselfe alone must feed the mind, 
And contemplation onely cooks the dish : 
What is it, then, — hath Heauen all these assigned 
For our vse, to that end we should be his ? 
Then must we giue him one poor little part, 
The onely thing he craucs — a thankfull heart. 



GOD'S BENEFICENCE. 

If from a friend some trifle we receiue, 

Some bracelet, gloues, or some such common 
thing, 
We think ourselues ungratefuU if we leaue 
These vnrecjuited ; and can we lesse bring 
To Him, which giues us all that we possess. 
Than the poore heart's true loue and thank- 
fulnesse ? 

How can his roiall bounties be exprest ? 

The things ordained for ornament and vse ; 
The various°fare prepared to feast his guests. 
Where each one for his appetite may choose. 
Oh, who can count the various kinds of crea- 
tures, 
Tlieir wondrous shapes, their colours, and tlieir 
features ! 
Ten thousand flocks that ore our heads still houers 
Which daily seeme to bid us kill and eat ; 



848 JOHN HAGTHORPE. 

Ten thousand fruits, which time to vs discouers ; 
Ten tliousand plants, and rootes, and seeds for 
meat ; 
The sculles, oh Lord, of all the lakes and 

fountaines, 
The heards are thine upon ten thousand 
mountaines. 

Ten thousand creatures for delight assign'd ; 

Ten thousand stones that precious vertues hold ; 
Ten thousand flowers to recreate the mind ; 
Ten thousand healthfull drugs, more worth than 
gold ; 
Ten thousand more then I can sum or count ; 
Thy blessings, Lord, all tongues and wits 
surmount. 

And euery blessing is so double blest, 

That they not only food for us containe. 
But bounteous Nature locks within the least 
Of these some helpe for our disease and paine : 
One thing sometimes hath such varietie, 
That many pretious vertues hidden lie. 

For all which God requires but thankfulnes, 

Though thanklesse we too often not agnize 
The Author of these benefits of his, 

But either Chance or Nature's gift them prize ; 
For those that with these blessings most 

abound 
Are commonly the most ingratefull found. 



TO EARTH. 



Earth, thou art a barren field 
Of delight and true contending; 



TO EARTH. 349 

All tlic pleasures thou dost yecld 

Give hut cause of sad lamenting. 

Where desires 

Are the fires, 

Still our soules tormenting. 

Riches, honour, dignitie. 

Are the highway to misfortune ; 
Greatnesse is a lethargie 

That to death can soon transport one. 
To he faire 
Causeth care, 
Gifts chaste thoughts importune. 

To be wittie, quick of tongue, 

Sorrow to themselves returneth ; 
To be healthfull, young, and strong. 
Feeds the flames where passion burnetii. 
Yet doe men 
Couet them 
More than what adorneth. 

To have friends and louers kind, 

That vs round enuiron ; 
Wife and children, though we find, 
These be robes that best attire one ; 
Yet their losse 
Is a crosse. 
Melting hearts of iron. 

To be perfect here, and wise. 

Is to know our indiscretions; 
And our goodnes chiefly lies 
In observing our transgressions : 
For we dwell 
As in hell, 
Thrall to bad impressions. 



350 PATRICK HANAY. 



Then, alas ! why long we so 

With lou'd sorrow still to languish ? 
Is there ought on earth but woe, 
Aye renewing cares and anguish ? 
Where new feares 
Still appeares, 
Darts at vs to brandish. 



XCII. 
PATRICK HANAY. 



SONNET. 



O Father God ! who by thy word didst make 

The azurd vault and all the host of heauen, 

The hils^ vales, plaines, fresh streams, and brinie 

lake, 
And vnto each inhabitants hast giuen : 
O Word, which, for our sakes, did flesh become, 
With sinners, to purge sinne, hadst habitation : 
Crimeles accus'd, condemn'd, the crosse thy doome, 
Sufferedst death, buriall, rose for our saluation : 
O Holy Ghost, which doth from both proceed, 
Sweet soule-inspiring spirit with peace and loue, 
Comfort to all, cast down for sinfull deed, 
Lessening their woes with hopes of heauen aboue : 
O Trinall-One, one God and Persons Three, 
Reform my waies, and draw me vnto thee. 



XCIII. 
RICHARD MILTON. 



LINES, 

From " London'')! Mi»frie, etc." 



Such is the force of Death's fell conquering hand, 

That none in this workl can his power withstand. 

'Tis not the power of a miglity king 

Can serue to free him from Death's deadly sting. 

Much less the title of a lord or knight 

Can keepe their persons from this pale-f^ic't wight. 

'Tis not the wisdome of a learned man — 

No, there is neither arte nor wisedome can 

Be forcible enough, with arte or will, 

Eyther to stay Death's stroke, or him beguile. 

Marke it, I pray you, how he makes men reele ; 

His bow is iron sure, and his arrowes Steele. 

How many through his might doe daily dye, 

How many likewise doe there sprawling lye, 

How many also dead in fields are found, 

And suddainly in streetes do fall to ground 

Euen as they passe, and them before were well. 

And felt but little ])aine vntill they fell. 



XCIV. 
ANONYMOUS. 



LINES, 

From " CatascoposJ* 

I SEE good lawes for godlie vse deuised ; 
The iust man's right, and rigor for offenses, 
By filthy lucre masqued and disguised ; 
Truth's but a sound to shadow foule pretenses ; 
For pride, ambition, ire, and auarice. 
Do dull, dimme, blanch, and blind the wisest eies. 
I see how wars, the canker of estate, 
Hel's image and al commonweales* downthrow. 
Spring from the proud ambitious hart's debate. 
Where rancor, spleene, and enuie overflow : 
Not multitudes of men conquest atchieve ; 
'Tis onely God that victorie doth giue. 



xcv. 

JOHN ARBOTT. 



THE FORCE OF CONTRITION. 

In the first age, when world did new begin, 

With many raines tliou didst drowne man and ; 'a: 

Againe vnto the watery floiuls giue scope, 

Againe tlie cataracts of lieauen let ope. 

We not of Abana and Pharpar dreame, 

We must be curd'e in onely Ionian's streamc — 

Blest streanie, which from thy mercies' liead doth 

rise. 
And thence descending runneth througii our eies. 
Waters beginning from earthe's slimie vaiiies 
Not able are to purifie our staines. 
Such are those teares which from hel's feare do 

grow,-— 
Such are those teares which from self-loue do flow. 
The raine which this detested elfe must drowne 
Must from aboue, must from higii heaucn come 

downe : 
Wherefore salt teares for sin send down a])ace — 
O happie dying in such streames of grace I — 
A sea of griefe in eu'ry place abound, 
And in the waues let vgly sin be drown'd. * 
Each one of vs a sinner's title beares, — 
Let vs be Magdalens in shedding teares: 
Of Hesebon, large fish-pondes be our eyes ; 
The waters wofull plaintes, the fish sad cries. 



[jAMES I, POETS.] 23 



XCVI. 
JOHN RHODES. 



A SONG OF PRAISE AND THANKESGIVINGTO 
GOD FOR THE KING'S MAJESTY RAIGNE. 

With cheerefull voice we sing to thee, 

O Lord, accept our melodic ; 
For thou in mercy, as we see, 

Hast delt with us most louingly, 
In giuing vs a royall king, 
Whose fame in all the world doth ring. 

God save King James, and still pull downe 

All those that would annoy his crowne. 

In wisdome like to Solomon, 

His grace doth sit in princely seate, 

With sword of iustice in his hand, 

And maintaines truth for small and great : 

He doeth succeede our Hester, shee 

Who neuer will forgotten bee. 

God save King James, etc. 

Like Constantine the emperour. 
He dooth begin his royall raigne. 

Whereat his foes are danted much. 
And seekes to him for grace amaine. 

Lord, make their peace to bee in thee, 

And then thrice happy shall we be. 

God save King James, etc. 

The Gospell pure he dooth maintaine. 

Among vs preached as before : 
Blind ignorance it shall not raigne. 

As some did hope and threaten sore. 



I 



SONG OF PRAISE AND THANKSGIVING. 355 

Our realm God hath established, 
And former t'eares from vs are fled. 

God save King James, etc. 

Lift vp your hearts to God on hie, 
And sing with one consent of niinde 

Laude and prayse to the Trinity, 
For our good king that is so kinde. 

Let vs reioyce in God alvvay 

That we have seene this happie day. 

God save King James, etc. 

All countries ioyne with vs in loue, 
To beat down Turke and Pope apace. 

Tlie king and counsel's acts approue ; 
Let vertue now all vice deface. 

Amidst all ioyes prepare to dye, 

That we may Hue eternally. * 

God save King James, etc. 



XCVII. 
ANONYMOUS. 



THE MIRACLES OF OUR SAVIOUR. 

An angel's trumpe from heauen proclaim'd his name 
Iesus, who came lost Adam's impes to saue ; 
Whose wondrous actes deserues eternal! fame : 
He Lazarus reuiued from the graue, 
Whose stincking coarse, and rotten carkas colde, 
Four dales and nights was couered in the moide. 

What shall I speake of other dead, reuiued ? 
Or make rehearsell of such obiects sere. 
Of blind and lame, of sence and sight depriued ? 
He made the dumbe to speake and deafe to heare ; 
He fowle infected soules from sinne did cure, 
And vgly vlcer'd leapers clensed pure. 

When waltring waues and windes would ouerthrow 

The shaking ships amid the seas ytost. 

He caus'd the sturdie stormes to stoope below. 

And saued ships and men like to be lost : 

He made the lame in leaping beare his bed, 

And with fiue loaves, two fish, fiue thousand fed. 

He water euen conuerted into wine ; 
He daunted deuills, and furies put to flight; 
He for thy sake did let them strangle swine ; 
He taught all sorts of men to follow light. 
His workes within no leaues can be enroul'd ; 
The ample world his wonders cannot hould. 



XCVllI. 
THOMAS COLLINS. 



MERCY. 

Dauid did mercy craue, and notliing more, 

In all his troubles and aduersities ; 

'Cause mercy ])aies sins' debt, and clearesthe score, 

Leaning no sign of our iniquities, 

To feare our soules or to olVend our eyes. 

Wherefore, with him, 1 will for mercy craue, 

That of my sins 1 may remission haue. 

Mercy's the sum and substance of my sute ; 
Mercy's the marke at which I aime by ])rayer; 
Mercy's soule's manna, heauen's sacred fruit; 
Mercy's the idea of the onely faire ; 
Mercy's God's seat, his hie and only chaire ; 
Mercy's the loadstone, that to life doth drawe ; 
Mercy's the gospell, that fulfills the lawe. 

Mercy's the obiect of the angells' loue; 
Mercy's the arke doth in sin's deluge sane ; 
Mercy's the mjtttir's oliue-bringing doue ; 
Mercy's the mSns that men saluation haue; 
Mercy's the most good that a man can craue ; 
Mercy's the salue that cures sin's vgly sores ; 
Mercy's the porter of heauen's pretious dores. 

Mercy mou'd Christ to come, and die for men; 
Mercy moues man to deeds of charitie ; 
Mercy may saue me, sinfull publican ; 
Mercy the saints pray for continually ; 
Mercv doth ])ardon man's iniquitie ; 
Mercy's most royall, bred and bonie in heauen ; 
Mercy's God's gift, the best that ere was giuen. 



XCIX. 
TRISTRAM WHITE. 



SAPPHICKS. 

Nonne suhiecta erit anima mea Deo. 
MY deare-bought soule, to thy God Creator 
No rebell be thou ; for, alas, too feeble 
Is thy fraile temper set against his wil's force. 

Thunder obeyes him. 
Humble vnto his pleasure all thy spirits ; 
Wings are weak organs to auoid his eye-sight — 
Earth, sea, and heauen's selfe are within that orbe's 
space, 

Hee's so beyond place. 

Downe, high heart — downe then, whether shall he 

adiure, 
And see thou welcome what hee throwes vpon thee ; 
Hang on his precepts, Hue a life well order'd, 

And fly no thunder. 
Here's thy clay-frame, — God, doe with it thy plea- 
sure ; 
Here's thine owne semblant by my sinnes abused; 
Here's thy deare Sonne's price : O, be good, my 
soule cryes, 

And be thou gracious. 

Downe, high heart — downe then, whether shall he 

adiure. 
And see thou welcome what hee throwes vpon thee ; 
Hang on his precepts, liue a life well order'd, 

And fly no thunder. 
O, my deare-bought soule, to thy God Redeemer 
Simply be subiect ; for, alas, without him 
Dwels nothing hopeful : then, O soule, to him still 

Simply be subiect. 



c. 

HENRY RAYMONDE. 



AN ODE. 



With prouidence reflect thy looke 
Into thy liue's accounting booke ; 
And thou shalt see liow time destroyes 
Thy youth, thy friends, thy foolish ioyes: 
Which pleasures, mocking all desires, 
Shew them but seruants vnto Hers. 
And looke on this with eies of minde, 
With which men see when they are blinde. 
None euer had such ioy a day, 
That from them did not slide away ; 
For that soone turncth into was* 
Which sprung of late as tender grasse. 
With ioy let none himselfe deceiue, 
For euery lust will take his leaue. 
Rich miserie is great men's share, 
Pompous distresse and glittering care, 
With which they toile as troubles lent. 
Till death exact of them their rent. 
Still in thy pleasure beare in minde 
That sorrow is not far behindc. 
Rivers present our image plaine, 
Which passing neuer turne againe. 
Such is this world when it is best, 
That each degree finds little rest : 
He that is highest in his pride, 
His fortune changeth as the tide. 

' Waste. 



360 HENRY RAYMONDE. 

All signifies a fading flower, 

Rust, time, and vvormes, will all devoure. 

Life, ioy, and euery pleasant weede, 

Scarce hangeth by a slender threede. 

To all, this period fate doth doome. 

That all must vnto nothing come. 

As child in nurse's arms, by Death 

Included, here we draw our breath, 

Where all our solace is vnstable, 

Our death vnknown, ineuitable: 

Which none by strength alleuiate may. 

Riches, or birth, or other way ; 

And earth is promiser of rest, 

Which is not as it seem'd possesst. 

None have contentment at their call. 

And smalest sweet abounds in gall. 

When we think surest for to stand. 

Then greatest slidings are at hand : 

One danger seldome comes alone, 

But moe proceed ere that be gone. 

The castels which repulse a foe 

Cannot demand a man from woe ; 

Wherefore old Solon did commend 

To call none happy till their end ; 

And Dyon gaue this sentence rare, 

"The shorter life, the lesser care." 

From birth to prison we ascend 

On earth, as stage to take our end. 

And here a life enui'd we haue. 

And no true rest vntill our graue. 

Wherefore, fooles' heauen, but wise men's hell, 

Vaine earth, I bid thy ioyes farewell. 

THE END. 



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